Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Tuesday, Returning Genealogy

I packed up a set of bottles to ship out. Four boxes, packed, taped and addressed, then weighed and measured. Shipping to Canada, the US Postal Service wants $262; it looks like UPS will be less expensive. But I will need to fill out customs forms and need more information (like a phone number) from the buyer.

We walk the dog over to Petersen's Barn to get a paper.

Post office to mail a birthday card, and buy some Chinese New Year stamps -- year of the dragon -- but they don't have the new stamps yet.

And then to pick up Mom's car from her brake work. One of the tail lights is burned out, so I stop at Auto Zone to get a replacement. They come in packs of two, so I replace both tail lights.

We went to Cleo's to return some genealogy work, and then on to the Bradley's to do the same. Mom talks to the Bradleys for awhile. I mention where I work, and he asks if I know why his PC would have lost sound. He has a replacement/new sound card, but after taking his machine apart, we find that he only has two available slots -- PCIE, and the card is PCI, so it won't fit. After putting the machine back together, it appears that I didn't fix anything, and didn't break anything either.

We also take a genealogy book over to John. That clears out 4 or 5 books, so Mom is making a serious effort.

Mr. Bradley mentions that there is a NARVRE meeting tomorrow at Noon at the Elks Lodge.

Monday, January 30, 2012

Monday, Taking the Car for Brake Work

Before Mom got up, I took a box of bottles to the Post Office to mail to Yuma, Arizona.

When Mom got up, we had pancakes for breakfast -- I used up the last of the pancake mix.

I also finished the job of cleaning the baseboard heaters -- blowing the dust and hair out with the reverse air part of the vacuum cleaner, and then using the vacuum cleaner to suck it up. Mom has two hoses -- one for the hard wood nozzle and one (with an electric cord) for the carpet cleaner. I could put one in the vacuum exhaust, to blow, and the other in the normal intake, to suck, and blow into the top of the baseboard units while sucking up anything that came out of the bottom at the same time.

We took a urine sample to the medical lab for Mom, a check to the bank, a letter to the Post Office, and Mom's car to a Goodyear shop to have the brakes fixed.

When we took the car in for an oil change, their recommendation was to have the shoes and pads replaced and the rotors and drums resurfaced. Calling around, this would take at least 4 hours. With Mom not getting up before around noon, or at least not getting ready for the day before around noon, it seemed unlikely we could take the car over, have it serviced, and bring it back in one day. But by taking it over in the afternoon, they could keep it overnight, work on it in the morning, and call us to have it picked up in the afternoon.

Left-over Chinese food for dinner. We may have one more day of this, but we are running low on milk and other staples, so we will need to do grocery shopping tomorrow.


Sunday, January 29, 2012

Sunday, Packing Bottles

After Church, we met John and Karen for lunch at Lok Yuan. Enough left-overs for a couple of days.

We stopped and picked up a newspaper to read.

I spent the afternoon pulling selected bottles out of the boxes and repacking them. We have an offer to buy 28 of them from a fellow in Canada. At this point, we just have to wait to see if he can get PayPal to work to pay for them.


Saturday, January 28, 2012

Saturday, Another Bookstore

Mom went to her OGS meeting today. While she was out, I went to the university branch of the Smith Family Bookstore. Again they did not have Wi-Fi, but they let me use their computer to access my web page. The result was I could tell I had 3 books, so I didn't buy them and end up with duplicate copies. But it also exposed that I had a veritable dearth of cartoons from Punch and they had several good ones, and I bought several more of them than I would have.

After dinner, I rented "Mars Needs Moms" and we watched it. I think movies are, generally, beyond Mom's abilities at this point -- at least fast paced movies.


Friday, January 27, 2012

Friday, the Bookstore

Mom didn't get up until about 11:30. In the meantime, I worked on the seat belt in her car. She has complained that it is difficult to pull out, so I removed the plastic cover and cleaned and lubricated it by spraying it with WD-40. I haven't told her about this, and want to see if she notices (and remarks on) a difference without being told that anything has changed.


Also I baked a chocolate cake, using a recipe that she printed out last week. I only made a half recipe, since it said it made a large cake. Chocolate cake with chocolate frosting! All made from scratch.

I vacuumed the kitchen. I was beginning to see dust bunnies of dog hair. Mom has a Rainbow Rexair, which uses water to trap the dust and dirt. Naturally then as I started to vacuum, it smelled of wet dog. After cleaning the kitchen pretty well, I reversed the vacuum to get it to blow instead of suck, and used that to blow out the baseboard heater. Lots of dust and hair came rolling out. Hopefully this will get the heater to work better. I probably need to do this same procedure on the other baseboard heaters, in the living room and bedroom.

We went down to Care Medical and ordered the bathtub support bar. They said it may be in next Thursday, or the following Thursday. If it comes in next week, I can pick it up and install it before I leave.

We then went to the Smith Family Bookstore, and looked at books for awhile. I found a few interesting ones. Smith Family Bookstore does not have Wi-Fi, so I could not check my online list of books against the ones I wanted to buy (to make sure I don't buy the same thing twice), but when I got home I checked, and it was good.

Dinner, and then the TV schedule says that "The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai" is on tonight. I'm not sure Mom will be able to understand any of this film.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Thursday, Oil Change

Mom had a "Lunch Bunch" downtown, so I worked on finishing the inventory of stamps and trading cards. I got that finished and put the boxes back in storage. I posted a couple of small items to eBay to see if we could find them new homes, but most of it will wait for another time.

When Mom came home from lunch, we went downtown to order/buy two things to help her avoid falls in the home: (1) A support for the bath tub, and (2) support arms for the toilet in the utility room.

The bath tub support didn't work. It's design doesn't really fit on a tub with a wide side wall, so I'll take it back and try a different design.


The toilet seat supports went much better.


Also I went to Oil Can Henry's and got the oil changed in the car I borrowed from Sue and Michael. A interesting approach. They want the driver to stay in the car as the oil is changed. They have a TV screen with 4 cameras showing the guy under the car, plus under the hood.

In addition, we took the boxes (cases!) of trading cards and dropped them off at Hooker's Sports Cards. I really don't think there is any value in them, but he may be able to keep them out of the landfill, and out of Mom's garage.

I made an appointment for Mom to have Moh's surgery on her two cancer spots. Sue had mentioned to them that I was leaving next Saturday, so they squeezed Mom in on the Friday before I leave. No aspirin for Mom until then.


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Wednesday, Stamps

I spent most of the day sorting stamps. Dad left several boxes of stamp related things, and I'm trying to figure out what it is and what to do with them. It appears that despite the volume and apparent diversity, there are really only a couple of different things. Most of these things are what are know as "first day issue" or "first day covers". I'm not sure if there is a difference. Someone takes a stamp, and on the first day that it is available (the issue day), puts it on an envelope -- generally a specially decorated envelope with a decoration appropriate for the stamp -- and has it postmarked at some special place. Dad has several different types of first day issues:

1. A collection of Normal Rockwell first-day-issues, complete with a special holder. Each stamp and envelope has a display page and all 100 display pages are put in a special album. Dad has all 100 first-day-issues and the book.


2. A set of 200 first-day-issues for the Philatelic History of the U.S., a four-volume set of albums, plus the 200 first-day-issues.


3. A set of more generic first-day-issues for stamps from 1976 to 1978.


4. A set of first-day-issue "art" posters.

On each of these you can see the stamp, the special cancellation, with the date and generally a place, and the extra stuff to make it special.

This is the bulk of the stamp stuff. There are additional things, but the rest takes up less space.

Also, today, we took the ten boxes of postcards that Dad had -- unused cards manufactured by Ashville -- and sold them to a dealer for $50 a box -- 5 cents a card. That money went right into Mom's checking account.

I made reservations to fly home on Feb 4.

While Mom was out to dinner with a neighbor, the dermatologist called. I asked her to call my sister Sue, who is on the "friends and family" list that can be told the details. Sue called back to say that both of the biopsy's that Mom had taken on Monday are cancerous. One is basal cell carcinoma and the other is squamous cell carcinoma. So we need to have both of these scheduled to be removed. I'll call to do that tomorrow, trying to get it done before I leave.

I'm making a list of all the stuff I want to do before I leave.



Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Tuesday, the Bank

I took Mom's car over to Kendall to have the oil changed. They had Wi-Fi, so I took my iPad and caught up on some email. Kendall said she will be needing to get new brakes.

When I got home, and Mom and I had breakfast, we went to the Coin shop on Willamette and sold some gold coins that Dad had bought. Gold is up, more or less, at the moment. Then we took that check and deposited it in her checking account. While we were at the bank, we tried to exchange the Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian currency that they got when they went over in the 80's and then forgot about. Good news is that they could do it at the branch; bad news is most of the currency, since it was from the 80's is no longer the current form. The teller said it was still valid, and the banks there (in Sweden, etc.) would still take it and exchange it for current money, but since it was no longer current, the bank here couldn't/wouldn't take it. Someone will need to take it back over there and take it to the bank.

After that, we went thru the refrigerator freezer section and pulled out stuff that was just too old -- a steak from 2009 (looked really grey!), blueberries from 2005, stuff from 2001, some stuff that we just couldn't identify (mushrooms?). We pulled out some stuff (like cheese) and moved it to the refrigerator with the aim of using it. Most of what is left is either new (frozen dinners) or nuts (walnuts, filberts, almonds, sunflower seeds, pine nuts, ...). There is also some popcorn (yum!) and rice (in the freezer?).

Still have to do the same for the freezer in the garage.

I've notice that water is dripping from the top refrigerator door now. I assume that is a temporary result of having the door open too long, but need to keep an eye on it to see if it persists.

Then John came by, Linda called, and Mom started going thru genealogy records. She kept doing that, so I went and did grocery shopping to let her continue.

I got another box of Jim Beam bottles ready to mail. Two bottles that someone in Arizona wants. Waiting for his check in the mail before mailing it.


Monday, January 23, 2012

Monday, Dermatologist

Mom had an appt. with Dr. Park today. It was scheduled for 4:30, but they called and said surgery had been shorter than expected, and could she come in at 1:15? That seemed reasonable. Turns out we just made it. But that went reasonably well. They took biopsy samples of two places -- ear and forehead. Results should be available on Thursday or so.

I went out and got windshield wipers for both cars and put them on. The one for Mom's car, passenger side, seems too long, but is what the book says. I made an appt. to get the oil changed in Mom's car on Tuesday.

I spent the evening scanning in front and back images of all the old foreign currency that Dad has. It's difficult to understand where he would have gotten all of this. For example, consider the following 50 Lira note which appears to be from 1943. Dad probably got it while he was in the Army during World War II.


But Dad was stationed in England for the entire time he was overseas, so how did he get an Italian bank note?

Even more puzzling is the following Japanese bank note:


It's for 10 Centavos. But Japan uses Yen, not Centavos. Centavos would be a Spanish speaking country. My best guess would be this is a bank note for the Philippines during the Japanese occupation during World War II. But again, how would Dad have gotten this? He was stationed in England, on the other side of the globe.

For dinner, I tried to start using up food that Mom has but hasn't used. We had a kielbasa sausage that was in the freezer, added to a box of Cheddar Broccoli pasta mix from the cupboard. Since Mom doesn't cook any more, I'm not sure why she bought these. Of course, they could just be left over from the transition from cooking to non-cooking.

Sunday, Talk to John

Up early for Church. Then we stopped by Barnes and Noble -- is this the only new bookstore left? -- where I bought a copy of the 2011 New Yorker Cartoon book. We had lunch at McGrafts Fish House. The food was good and we had enough left-overs for dinner too!

We drove home and then switched cars, so I could see Mom drive in the rain. She needs new windshield wipers too. We drove over to John's and talked to him for awhile. Then a little grocery shopping and a newspaper and back home.

I posted a couple of bottles on Craig's List, and worked on cleaning up email.

I have pulled out all the little banknotes from foreign countries that Dad bought and entered it in a spreadsheet -- country, year, amount. It looks like there may be some market for some of it, so I will scan each type of note, to get a nice picture of it (front and back), so I can create a web page of them.

Seeing me work on this, Mom brought out an envelope of some really tattered bills that look like bills from Europe and Japan from about World War II. They also look like they have been thru World War II -- very bad shape, creased, dirty. I'll add those to the list to work on.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Saturday, reorganization

This morning, I combined Mom's food stores in the Storage Room with those in the cabinets in the garage, bringing all of them together in one place, the cabinets. At the same time, I purged all food items that are known to be from 2006 or before.

I also started to reorganize some of the boxes of stamps and cards that Dad had purchased in the 1970's and 1980's bringing together the various different types of things, with an eye to getting rid of them. Following up on that, I took some of the trading cards to a place downtown, Hooker's Sports Cards, to see if he could be interested in them. He pretty well agreed with my original thoughts that it would be difficult to find a market for them, but he would look.

Grocery shopping. Getting the newspaper. Some reading.

Friday, January 20, 2012

Friday, wiring the hallway

I had suggested to Mom that it would be useful to have some outlets in the hallway. There had been one attached to a 3-way switch for the hall lights, but how useful is an outlet that only works when the lights are on? After Mom said it would helpful, I thought about it and realized it would be a long, difficult, and filthy job, rooting around in the attic insulation to run new wires. Plus there is no good power source, since the house wiring is all 50 years old or more.

But I got to the point there was little to use to procrastinate about the wiring, and realizing that was what I was doing, I told myself I couldn't go down to a book store until I finished the wiring. So today, I started it.

By 9:00 AM, I was up in the attic. I laid out the hallway, marking the two walls, and what electrical wires should be in them -- switches, outlets -- anything in the walls. Since there is little in the hallway itself, most of this is in the rooms adjacent to them -- the light switches in the kitchen, and guest bedroom, the outlet for the fridge, the kitchen stove fan vent.

The attic has two layers of insulation. Some years ago, I put down a layer of R-30 batts on top of the pre-existing blown-in insulation. Looks like cellulose, possibly with some rock wool mixed in. I peeled back the R-30 fiber glass and started digging thru the cellulose.



I was able to find the wires for the old 3-way switch outlet, but was off for the other two new outlets. I cut the outlets in the walls in the hallway first, and then tried to drill into the same wall cavity from the attic. I missed on both of the two new outlets, and had to drill another hole in an adjacent wall cavity. It appears that the wires for, for example, wall switches do not go straight up into the attic, but rather sometimes go up over a cavity or so. I can see where the wall studs are from a nail in the top of the wall header. The nails are 16 inches apart, as the wall studs are 16 inches apart too.


Other than having to drill more holes than I wanted, the main difficult was feeding a new wire down the wall an into the existing electrical box next to the 3-way switch for the hallway. This outlet had been wired to the switch, but it clearly needed its own power supply. I was able to push the new wire down in the wall cavity, and catch it with a bent wire, but had great difficulty getting it just the right length to be able to guide it over and into the existing holes in the top of the electrical box. Mom helped, but being hard of hearing, and not too quick, it was difficult to coordinate my raising and lowering the wire in the attic with her telling me if it was at the right level.

Eventually, we trapped the wire and tied a string to it. This let Mom know where the wire was, even when it had been pulled up too far, and we were able to get the wire to be just the
right length so that it was resting on the top of the electrical box and I could edge it over so that it would pop just a little into the hole in the box. Then with a pair of needle nose pliers, I pulled it down into the box, used a wood clamp to keep it from sliding out and went back up in the attic to push more wire down.

Once that wire was done, it was fairly easy to take it over and drop it down the next hole. I overestimated how much wire was needed to get down to the new outlet hole in the wall, and shoved it in. Downstairs, I could put my hand thru the new outlet hole, and grab the wire, pulling it over and out of the wall, crimping it to keep it from sliding back into the wall, and then back upstairs to pull out the excess wire. Then it was the same for the next outlet. Each of these new outlets got two wires -- one to bring it power, and the other to take the power on to the next outlet.

After the last new outlet hole had wire, I needed to figure out where to get power for these three outlets. One option is a box in the attic that is labeled to be a 220 power line going to the Sun Room heater. I could tap off of half of this to get 110. But that seemed wrong.

But I noticed that a line came up from the circuit breaker box directly to the pull-string light in the attic and then off someplace else. So I decided to replace the line from the circuit breaker box (circuit 7) with a new line (so we have real 110 plus a ground wire). I could run the wire from the new outlets into the pull-string light box, and continue to run the rest of the line where ever it goes.

That took more work. I had to identify the wire, disconnect it in the circuit breaker box, and run a new wire from there up thru the wall into the attic and to the pull-string light. But once that was done, I could then attach the line to the new outlets, giving them power. And I managed to do it without electrocuting myself.

Once the circuit breaker work was done and the new outlets were wired in, I could clean up the attic, put all the insulation back in place, and go back to the hallway and attach the wires to the new outlets, put those in the boxes, and put a cover plate over them. This is pretty easy; it just takes time.

Finally, around 7:00 PM, I had the outlets wired and in place. I turned on the circuit breaker for circuit 7 and used the new outlets to power the vacuum cleaner to clean up all the sheet rock dust and cellulose insulation I had tracked all over.


There is a new outlet on the left wall, and then another on the right wall past the doorway into the kitchen. This run of the circuit ends at the outlet on the wall at the end, over the phone player, next to the light switch.


Thursday, January 19, 2012

Thursday, Doctor's appointment

I keyed in an updated food inventory for the food in the garage.

Then Mom had a 12:45 doctor's appointment.

We dropped some old magazines off on our way back from the doctor's office. I had posted them to Craig's List and the person who wanted them was right on the way home.

In retrospect, not much doing today. Where did all the time go? E-mail.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Wednesday, Posting the Avon Bottles

Mom slept in again this morning while I went thru the food items in the garage to see what is still there. The amount in the garage is significantly decreased. Mom later said that she past a lot of it on to the mailman for a food drive.

Linda, my cousin, had called and left a message with Nancy's phone number, so I called that and talked to Nancy for a while, to get her new address. Mom had sent a Christmas card to her old address and it came back. Now that we have her new address, we'll send it off again.

I took all the Avon bottles that have popped up -- from the known Bottle inventory, the new bottles that were in the dresser in the garage, and from the new boxes that I just went thru. There are 31 bottles altogether. I took pictures of them, and packed them into a box to see how much it would weigh. I made a list (and checked it thrice) of all the Avon bottles we have. And I posted the whole lot of them to eBay, to see if anyone is interested in any of them.

Otherwise, it was just a wet and cold day -- the forecast is for rain, and then rain, and then more rain. I was at the computer much of the day.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Tuesday, Hearing Aid appt.

I was able to type in my inventory of the boxes in the garage this morning. I put all the entries in a spreadsheet -- 117 items in 21 boxes. As I typed it in, it became obvious that separate columns could be used for the box each item is in, the year, number of copies, the country of origin, the type of an item, a longer text description, and the manufacturer.

Mom had an appointment with the Hearing Aid people at 12:00 noon, so I had to wake her up by 10:00, so she could get ready. As such, we mostly had to skip breakfast, so after the appointment -- they cleaned and adjusted her hearing aids -- we stopped at Applebee's for some lunch. Mom got her favorite -- a cup of French Onion soup.

And we had hot chocolate. It was snowing when we started out, but it was above freezing, so nothing was sticking. By the time the appointment was over, it was just raining and cold.

After lunch, we went grocery shopping and got vegetables and a beef roast for dinner.

Upon returning home, I took the bag of pop-tabs that Mom has been collecting to the scrap metal yard over near our old house on Aberdeen. Mom had collected 4 pounds, which at the current price of 55 cents per pound meant a total of $2.20. I skipped the paper work necessary to have them cut us a check and just told them to keep the pop-tabs. When I got home, I paid Mom $2.25 cash.

I started the roast on the stove. It took about 4 hours to cook. But we have two full Pyrex containers of left-overs for the next few days.

John stopped by and picked up the trash. He didn't seem real interested in the boxes of stuff from the garage. Neither am I.

After dinner, I went thru Mom's kitchen cupboard of food, looking for cans or boxes of food that was "Best used" before 2005. I found about a box worth of things, some from as far back as 1998. That should give her more space, and, hopefully, better nutrition.

Monday, January 16, 2012

Monday, Cedar Chest

It snowed last night, so I got out and looked at the roof. The theory is that if Mom needs insulation in the attic, it will be because the heat of the house is leaking out thru the attic and the roof. When it goes thru the roof, it will melt the snow. But the roof looks pretty good. Solid white snow almost everywhere. There is one spot over the Sun Room that looks suspicious, but I don't think there is any access to the Sun Room attic space, so I can't do anything about that.


When Mom got up, we had pancakes for breakfast, at noon.

While Mom was sleeping this morning, I went thru most of the new boxes from the garage and almost have an inventory of them made up.

Mom is still looking for an old ring, and didn't find it in her jewelry boxes, so now she is looking in her cedar chest. Mostly the cedar chest has old clothing -- like Dad's Army uniforms from World War II and Korea. But there are also some old books. These are small books that Mom says were used in some place that she worked as a young girl and they were throwing them out, so she took them. There are 12 altogether, all but two in good shape.


There was also a scroll which when unrolled revealed a peacock painted on fabric, probably silk. This may be from Korea, since the style is similar to other Chinese and Japanese painted scrolls I have seen.


The cedar chest has two wooden nickels -- these are the only ones I have seen that are not round, like a coin.


And Mom has many of her old dolls from her childhood, in various states of disrepair.


There were also some random buttons and pins, including this one from the 1904 convention of the Knights Templar.


After looking over all of this, we took Blue for a walk. I managed to guilt Mom into walking too. We went around the block. Mom has a different style of walking Blue. I let Blue walk, and smell the yards and such, figuring the purpose of the walk is to get Blue out. Mom seems to view it as an activity to finish. She kept up much more speed than I do; a brisk walk at probably twice as fast as I saunter. And this was without a cane. Poor Blue never really go a chance to stop and smell anything -- it was just straight out and around the block at full speed. I had no difficulty keeping up with Mom -- I just adjusted the length of my step -- but Mom was on a mission.

Finishing going thru the 21 boxes of stuff from the garage. I'll type in a complete list tomorrow. One item to mention tho. In 1984 or so, Mom and Dad (and Sue) went to Sweden, and then Norway and Denmark. What do I find in a box. A hotel key. A hotel key for Hotel Eremitage in Copenhagen. Not just any hotel room key. Remember this was 1984. It was the key to ...

Room 911.

17 years before 9/11, Dad knew about it and saved the room key to warn us. Spooky!



Sunday, January 15, 2012

Sunday, New Findings

We went to church this morning. Mom's alarm went off at 7:00 and she was awake by 7:05, which is pretty good, given that she is effectively deaf without her hearing aids. It was lightly snowing as we drove to church.

After we got home, I rebuilt the back step, to make it one continuous piece of plywood for both the dog door and the people door.


Also while we were in the garage, I asked Mom to take a look at the dresser which had been behind the chess men bottles (which we have now sold and shipped). Several of the drawers had magazines -- Reader's Digest, National Geographic, Smithsonian -- and I will try to give those away.


but several of the other drawers had previously undiscovered Jim Beam and Avon bottles.



Mom's house is listed in the Lane County Assessment & Taxation Property Information data base as being 1868 square feet. The obvious question is if it includes all the add-ons -- the Sun Room and the Office. Measuring things by hand, I come out with 1367 for the main house, 188 for the Sun Room and 297 for the office (including the computer room). This adds up to 1852. The difference is within measurement error, or could be the difference between inside versus outside measurements, but is close enough to say it is right.

I baked some date bars this evening. So good.



Saturday, January 14, 2012

Saturday, New Inventory

Mom had a DAR meeting at lunch today, and since she doesn't get up much before lunch, it worked great for her.

While she was asleep and at DAR, I finished up with the last inventory, and started a new one. There were a lot of unknown boxes in the garage, and I brought them in to look thru. I don't even know what type of things these are.


I also got some 2x6 to support the new back step. Vacuumed. Washed the dishes.

After dinner, I squeezed oranges to make orange juice (for tomorrow), and to clear them out of the fridge before they got too old.

Mom seemed to be getting in the mood to go thru old things and brought out her jewelry box. It has a lot of old stuff. Not much jewelry -- and costume at that -- but old things that my Father brought back from WWII -- a 1914 Iron Cross, a good conduct medal, and such.


Mom also has a couple of small boxes of buttons -- dining at the Seattle Space Needle, but especially campaign buttons: FDR, Adeli Stevenson, Wayne Morris. She even has two of McKinley and Teddy Roosevelt in 1900. She isn't that old, so she must have gotten it from someone else.




Friday, January 13, 2012

Friday the Thirteenth

Mom woke up today saying she wanted to go to the Audiologists to get her hearing aids cleaned. I called and they had an open time between 10:00 and 11:00, so we got moving and went downtown. They cleaned and adjusted Mom's hearing aids. They remarked that there was a spot on her ear, her right ear I believe, that Mom said was sore from the hearing aids, but they said it was not caused by the hearing aids, and Mom should have her dermatologist check it out.

While we were downtown, we stopped and looked at a couple of places, looking for a ring to replace the wedding ring that Mom lost after her hand was fractured. One place, Goldworks, could make a custom piece for her. Across the street, the Pewter Rabbit had a good selection of vintage rings.

We went to an estate sale near Shasta Junior High, but found nothing there.

We stopped by the bank and deposited the $187 check from Replacements.com for the plates and a $84.14 check for the bottles.

We took a load of things to the Glenwood recycling center -- mostly paper and cardboard. While we were that far out, we looked at some pawn shops in Springfield for her ring, and ended up at White Cloud Jewelers which had an excellent set of demo rings, and could order whatever she wanted. She ended up wanting a 3.5 mm size 5 ring, but did not want to order it. She wants to find a vintage ring, not a new one -- one with the memories already there in the wearing of the ring.

So we did some grocery shopping. We got a pound of "Mexican Prawns", which look a lot like the shrimp we get at home. I made up some pasta and sauteed the shrimp to go with it. Some steamed mixed vegetables, and garlic bread, for dinner.

Mom's car key had broken, and I had a copy made at Jerry's. But it didn't work (we learned today), so I took it back and had another made. This one works. While I was out, I stopped by Albertson's and used the RedBox to rent "Rio", which we watched. Mom enjoyed it, and only fell asleep during it once.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Thursday, More inventory again

After the issues of Blue recovering from the Vet's yesterday, both Blue and Mom slept in today. While they were sleeping, I started going over inventory again. Am almost done making the list and checking it twice.

In the afternoon, we went out and did grocery shopping. Mom insisted on going to the Post Office, so we loaded up the car with the old TV and VCR and dropped it off at Goodwill while we were in the area.

I also went to Jerry's and got wire for the new outlets in the hallway. Mom's car key had broken, so I got a copy made at Jerry's. Apparently the black plastic head of the key was not plastic over metal, but just plastic, and it broke. The new key is solid metal.


Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Wednesday, Blue to Vet

Blue had to go to the Vet today for a teeth cleaning. They put her under a general anesthesia so it takes all day -- putting her under, doing the work, letting her come to and adjust. So Blue needed to be there around 8:00 am. I figured I would take her in myself and Mom could come to pick her up later, but Mom was having none of that. She got up around 6:30, so as to be ready by 8:00.

The Vet called and said things went well.

While we were waiting on Blue, I went thru the counter top under the cupboard. I'm looking to throw out anything that is dated 2005 or older. Like the bottle of Worcester Sauce labelled 2001. I found one can of peaches that appears to be under internal pressure, so we are tossing that. And quite a few things that were infested with some kind of moth. Plus I have a box of a dozen cans or so that look okay, but are too old.


I found that the office exterior door has a self-storing storm window. You can slide it down to let the upper part be a screen, or slide it up to create a complete storm door. It had been down, so I moved it up, at least for the winter.

I badgered Mom into walking over to get the paper. It took some time, but it should be good exercise for her.

Blue came home from the Vet around 4:00. She seems disoriented, but she is such a closed individual, I can't tell if she is in pain (we have pain meds), or hungry, or just disoriented (she keeps bumping into things and going the wrong way). I'm keeping an eye on her; I expect she
will be okay by tomorrow.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Tuesday Post Office, again

The buyer for the Chessmen sent a PayPal payment today, so it was off to the Post Office with the boxes. There were 4 boxes, almost 150 pounds. The total postage cost was $149.02.


The rest of the day was mainly taken up with working on putting shelves in the utility room. We had started on this the other day, and found the fixed shelf units where not big enough for the containers of cleaning supplies that is our primary goal. So we put brackets on the wall and put shelves on those.


I also got the first coat of polyurethane on the back of the new back step.


Monday, January 9, 2012

Monday, Packing Bottles

Mom had (well, Dad had) a complete 32 piece set of Chess men in the form of whiskey bottles from Old Crow. I sold them on eBay, and today packed them up for shipping. There were a set of Frito-Lay boxes in the storage room, and they fit perfectly in those. I ended up with 4 boxes. Each of the Frito-Lay boxes holds 4 Chess men per layer. However, Dad actually had 33 pieces, not 32 -- there is an extra light Knight. So I ended up with 8 layers, plus 1. I sent the buyer a link to our list of bottles and she picked 3 others that she wanted.

One of these was an Old Crow figurine bottle of their mascot, an old crow, in a tuxedo, with red vest and white spats, and a top hat. The top hat was actually the cork. Turns out the cork had broken, so I wanted to wrap the top hat separately for shipping. In trying to find something to wrap the hat in, I noticed a drop or two of brown liquid. Great, they apparently did not drain the bottle well. I take it into the kitchen to remove the cork, and ... the bottle was still full! The cork fell down in the whiskey. I poured it into a Pyrex measuring glass; more than 2/3 of a quart. Rinsed out the bottle and put it in the sun to dry. Filtered the whiskey thru a coffee filter to get out the cork bits, and put it in a plastic water bottle in the fridge.

The boxes, once packed and ready to ship, weigh 144 pounds altogether. There are 4 boxes, weighing from 28 to 50 pounds each.

I got the first coat of polyurethane on the piece of plywood that I want to use to replace the step down from the Sun Room to the outdoors.

We heard back from Replacements.com about the plates I sent to them. They should be sending us a check for $185.

I installed the latest version of AOL, version 9.7. This seems to have cured the problem we were having with AOLDial.exe not quitting when we tried to shut the computer off.

I spent some time at Home Depot, and have a new plan for shelves in the utility room. I bought the basic pieces and will try to install them tomorrow. I returned the previous shelf units. Of course, the new plan will be about twice the expense of the two shelf units.

Mom had a simple gold wedding band, but lost it when she fractured her hand in one of her recent falls. They put her hand in a cast and said she needed to take off all her ring for the duration. So she wants to get a new one. But not a "new" new one, a used new one -- so that it will have "history". We stopped at a couple of pawn shops, but no one seems to have just a plain gold ring; everything has diamonds and other stones.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Sunday, Failed Shelving

Church took up most of the morning. Then we stopped at Market of Choice and got some groceries.

Back home, I replaced both of the switches for the hallway light, and it now works as a three-way circuit again. I think the problem was really just a loose wire, so I probably did not need to replace the switches, but I don't see that it did any harm.

The real problem is the outlet next to one of the light switches. It was run in parallel to the light, so it only worked when the light was on. I un-wired it, and will try to run a new line with outlets in the hallway and also this outlet. That would provide 3 outlets in the hallway. I need some wire, and also to see what is available in the attic.

I also tried to install some shelves in the utility room to hold all the various cleaning supplies. I thought I did a pretty good job in getting them installed, but ...


it turns out that many of the cleaning supplies are in big bottles, or at least tall bottles -- up to 12 inches tall. The shelves are fixed at 8 inches apart. The result is that most of the cleaning supplies will only fit on the top shelf, and there is not enough of that to hold all of them. So after putting the shelves up, I took them down, and now must consider alternative solutions.

I consoled myself by putting a first coat of stain on a replacement for the back door step.

Saturday, Clearing out

We have been having a persistent problem with the AOLDialer. When I try to turn the computer off, Windows complains that AOLDial.exe is still running and is not responding to a request to quit. When Mom runs AOL, she uses a broadband connection, so we should not need a dialer. And this happens even when we turn the machine on, use Chrome only, and then turn the machine off.

There was a web posting about editing the msconfig start-up script to remove running AOLDial.exe, but that does not seem to work -- after I remove it, something just puts it back in the list. I removed all the old dialer information (old phone numbers, etc.) so it has nothing it can do anyway, but that doesn't help either. I unchecked the box in the AOL setting that says to check if AOLDial.exe is the default dialer. Nothing seems to work.

I figure there are two remaining options. One, a new version of AOL is available. If we upgrade to that, the re-install may fix the problem. Two, I can find the AOLDial.exe file and rename it to be something else (old_AOLDial.exe) so that there is no program for whatever currently starts it to find and run. Of course, if it does do some necessary function, that may cause other problems.

Mom has a very old floor lamp in the Sun Room. She says it is one of the few things that she got from her Grandfather when he died. It was coming loose, so I tightened everything up and cleaned off the dust and dog hair.

I've moved the old TV and VHS VCR and stand out of the Sun Room. Mom said that she hasn't watched anything on this in, like, forever, and had forgotten how to run it. The batteries in the VCR remote are so corroded that it doesn't work.


The stand had a bunch of VHS tapes on it, which I put in a box and moved out too. There are more tapes in the bookshelves under the windows, and I will wait a bit and then move those out too, since she can no longer play VCR tapes. (no VCR; no TV). But there were a few that looked personal.

1. Peterson Family Home Movies. This has been replaced by the DVD, so I don't see an issue with getting rid of it (recycle as plastic).
2. William & Mary Peterson, June 27, 1993 50th Anniv. Video
3. SPRR 4. Bethel Boy Scouts 1960s by 3 Heberts.

I'm assuming that we/Mom may want to keep these. But she can't play them. Seems that we want to take them either to Sue's or my place in Texas, and have them transferred to DVD, if we want to keep them. So I've put them aside.

Mom said there was a big piece of sheet metal and a pole behind the shrubs in the back yard that she wanted to get rid of; she was concerned that the dog might run into a sharp edge. It appears to be a piece of galvanized metal roofing. The pole used to hold a bird house. I posted both to Criag's List and Mike came by and picked them up.


I bought some metal wire shelf units from Home Depot and intend to mount them in the utility room on the wall. That would allow all the cleaning supplies to be put in one place and visible; we could get them off the kitchen counter. The wall was used to display three blue and white plates; I moved those to the Sun Room.

Also, I looked at the hallway electrical wiring. The wiring for the 3-way switches to control the hallway lights looks right -- almost text book. So my current guess is that the switches themselves have broken. I have new switches and will try to swap out the old with new.

Friday, January 6, 2012

Friday, Finding the Circuits

Our trip to Harrisburg was called off; the camcorder had already sold.

I updated the inventory spread sheet and have it ready for a final review.

Then, in preparation for re-wiring the hallway, I turned the various circuit breakers on and off to determine what is on which circuit, so I can safely turn off the hallway light circuit and re-wire it. This turned out to be more complex than I thought, and we still have a couple of circuits that we cannot identify, but at least I know that Circuit 9 controls the hallway lights.

Main 1 Range
Main 2 Microwave Oven
Main 3 Hot Water Heater
Main 4 Baseboard Heaters
Main 5 Baseboard Heaters
Main 6 Controls 1 to 13
1,2 Heat in Office (Play room?)
3a Refrigerator
3b Dishwasher
4,6 Sub Panel -> Sun Room Heater
5a Bathroom Lights, outlets
5b Garage Lights, outlets
7 Office Lights, outlets in office by garage, outlets in garage
8 Lights in Utility Room, Kitchen (over table), Back Bedroom, Master Bedroom
9 Lights in Kitchen (by DR), DR chandelier, hallway lights, Guest Bedroom, Kitchen Fan, Doorbell
10 LR outlets
11 Computer lights, outlets
12 ?
13 Sun room lights, outlets


Mom has been watching a couple of Cary Grant DVDs. I think I've convinced her to give up her VHS VCR and the TV it is attached to. She hasn't used it in years, and doesn't remember how to work it anyway.


Thursday, January 5, 2012

Thursday, More Inventory

I continued working on the inventory today. Got the actual work done, now it's time for entering it all in the spread sheet.

The cleaning lady came today. She vacuumed and mopped. Also cleaned the tub. Will be back in another two weeks.

Mom and I went down town to look at some mobility aids. We went to Care Medical. We went to look at a pole to help Mom be able to stand up out of bed, but ended up looking also at some toilet safety rails and a tub grab bar by Nova Medical Products. We talked to Sue about them later and they look like a good idea, so we have agreed to go back down and buy them.

In addition, Sue is interested in a camcorder that she saw on Craig's List for Eugene. The lady that is selling it in is Harrisburg, about 17 miles North of here. Mom and I will go see it tomorrow.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Wednesday, Inventory

Old Crow put out a set of whiskey bottles as Chess Pieces. Each piece is a separate bottle, about12 to 18 inches tall. Dad had a complete set of 32 pieces. I posted it to eBay, and it sold today for$70. There were 4 different bidders for it. Now I need to figure out how to ship it to the buyer.I'm waiting on the buyer to let me know what they want, but I've pulled the bottles out and havethem ready to go.


I spent most of the day doing inventory.

In the evening, Brenda from across the street came over and we all went to dinner at the Fairfield Church of the Nazarene. Mom likes the fellowship.

Tuesday Eye Appointment

Mom had her eyes examined in August 2011, and got a prescription for new glasses. Then, before she could get new glasses, fell, bruising her face. Also she had surgery in October or November to prevent her eyelashes from rubbing against her eyes. All this may have changed her vision. So we figured it was best to have her eyes checked before getting new glasses. Sure enough, her vision has changed. We have a new prescription.

But, the eye doctor also noticed some macular degeneration in one eye. He suggests that we come back in February (which would be 6 months from her original eye exam) for a complete eye exam -- this visit was just to check her prescription -- to see if this changes. So we have another appointment for Feb 6.

While we were out, we got groceries -- milk, eggs, bananas -- the perishables.

John came by and picked up the trash.

I posted the 1995 to 2004 Tax books to Craig's List.

I took Blue for a walk. The weather was surprisingly good -- dry, warm, and even some sun. Didn't need a coat.

Then in the evening, we went thru the big box from the garage. This was mainly dishes.


There were some random dishes, but most were related to the Royal Family of England. Cups and saucers and plates commemorating the coronation of the various English kings and queens from the 20th century. Starting with a teapot of Queen Victoria. Mom says this was given to her as a child by her mother, because the tip of the spout was broken. Then King Edward VII.


Including a fairly rare plate of King Edward VII that isn't labeled at all -- no caption, nothing on the back. Also, easy to lose in the box, a pamphlet from the funeral of Edward VII.


I didn't see anything for George V who was king from 1911 to 1936, but we have a coronation cup for Edward VIII, who then abdicated in 1936, and we have the coronation cup for George VI, and for his daughter, Elizabeth II (1952).


Also, apparently a trip that George VI took to Canada in 1939 was a big deal.


And then there is the obligatory stuff for Price Charles and Diana.


But the big surprise was that most of the box is two huge dolls of Price Charles and Lady Diana from the Danbury Mint, each 18 inches tall. These are still in the boxes. Apparently from July 1986 according to the postage.


After all this royalty, the rest of the dishes are pretty mundane, but still nice.


It appears that collectible plates was not just an investment on Dad's but started earlier. Of the three here the nicest, in my opinion is the Oregon plate from 1976, which was made by Johnson Bros (an English China maker) for Meier & Frank ("Established in Oregon in 1857").


But probably the most unusual is the plate for the "State Normal School, Bellingham, Wash".


From the back, it was Made in Germany by Wheelook, for "B. B. Furniture Co., Bellingham, Wash.". I don't know why this school would rate such attention, or why we would have such a plate. The school had this name from 1904 to 1937. Wikipedia has a photo of the Bellingham Bay Furniture building in Bellingham from 1908, also known as The Flatiron Building of Bellingham.