Showing posts with label outside. Show all posts
Showing posts with label outside. Show all posts

Friday, July 23, 2010

Blueberry Overload

On Tuesday afternoon some of us ditched work and went blueberry picking at this U-Pick farm south of town. The sun and the mosquitoes were fierce, but the blueberries were abundant. Now I'm experiencing what never happens in regular life: a surplus of blueberries. I've eaten soooo many blueberries in the past few days. It's impossible to get sick of them, though. I also froze some for later use—we'll see how well they hold up in the freezer.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Violas

Our next-door neighbor Jim brought over a couple of trays of black viola seedlings a few weeks ago. Now they're in a pot by our front door, looking perky. Jim is great. He is a professional landscaper, and his yard is a total inspiration.

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Mulch

Our backyard has turned into a giant jungle this summer due to my neglect, but I was able to get out there and spread some new mulch over a weedy zone. This was the first bag; eventually I had used twenty. It won't stop the weeds, but it may slow them down a bit.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Winter Sets In

Just a few weeks ago, College Town looked like this:


Today, here are the strata of gray outside my library study carrel window:

Monday, June 16, 2008

Random Bullets of Inundation

  • As of yesterday, Toxic Mold Building went from the "in danger of flooding" list to the "flooded" list. This is a picture a professor from the department took on Saturday of the river approaching the building from the right.
  • Mr. F was supposed to fly home from Atlanta on Saturday, but there is no open route for me to drive to the airport to pick him up. So he's stranded in Chicago at a friend's house.
  • A bright spot amid all the breached levees: a mobile home park south of town that our friend Steve, who works for the city, was frantically sandbagging was evacuated—he had to personally go door to door to evict people who for the most part really can't afford to lose their homes and their possessions—but the latest news is that the sandbag levee seems to be holding!
  • An 1898 wooden bridge, no longer used for traffic but preserved as a landmark, was carried away by the Cedar River. It was out in the middle of nowhere, with only a bar and a few houses nearby. You could drive out there, buy a PBR at the bar, walk carefully around the picturesque but alarming gaps in the planks, and sit at a picnic table on the bridge and watch the river flow by. Mr. F and I had our second date there.

Friday, June 13, 2008

Uh Oh


Toxic Mold Building lies on the banks of the bucolic Iowa River, which is so bucolic you can often forget there's a river there at all.

Well. I'm sure you know where this is going. Here's the parking lot as of this morning. The river is behind those trees.

On Wednesday morning I was in the office and about to take off to go sandbag in one of the neighborhoods when I ran across one of the English department office staff taking art off the walls. We had been warned to be prepared to evacuate but nothing had been ordered. But surely the water can't come up to the third floor? "Mold," she said. "The building may be shut up in the heat for two months." Boy, was I sorry to be right about my mold prediction, but I still thought she must be overreacting.

Meanwhile our office manager, the lovely and heroic G., was back from an emergency meeting with university administrators and called us into the conference room. There was a 50-50 chance of having to evacuate. E-mails started going out over the next two days, increasingly stern:

Wednesday: Come get anything from your office you'll need, as we may have to evacuate, and the order could come as soon as Friday or Monday.

Thursday morning: You will NEED to be out of your office by Friday at 5:00. The doors will be chain-locked at that time!

Friday morning: The parking lot is now closed due to water. You can only take as many of your possessions as you can remove by hand and carry through the water to wherever you are able to park.

Friday, an hour later, from someone in facilities management who must have gotten wind of the previous e-mail: PLEASE DO NOT ATTEMPT TO WALK/DRIVE/ENTER ANY STANDING WATER! DO NOT ATTEMPT TO RETRIEVE ANYTHING IF YOU HAVE TO ENTER STANDING WATER! YOUR SAFETY IS MORE IMPORTANT!

After the flurry of e-mails, the oddest thing, this afternoon, has been the silence afterwards. All the computers have been taken out; no one is in the building to send any more updates.

On Thursday my boss and I packed up the Lit Mag office and put what we needed to run Lit Mag in our cars. This morning (Friday) I went over to Mr. F's building, which is about a block from the river. Their evacuation order was for 5:00 Saturday, when he'd be back in town, and he had said he would take care of it then. But the way things were going, I offered to move things in his office to higher shelves just in case.

When I got to his building the lights were off and people were removing items, not just moving them up. "They're sandbagging buildings up the hill from us," said Mr. F's colleague. "This is gonna be a fish tank." I went to get my car and move it to the loading dock, but by the time I got there the National Guard was no longer letting people down the road to the building. Luckily Mr. F's colleague, a formidable woman, was able to convince the soldiers to let me through.

So I hauled everything I could into the car, and then walked across the way to the main library. "Closing at 5 pm indefinitely," a sign said. I had gotten stuff out of my study carrel Thursday, but I got some more. The computer system was just about to go offline when I renewed the last of my books. One of my professors walked by and made fun of me for renewing books at a time like this.

As I drove home an hour ago with my loaded car, I noticed buildings a half a mile from the river being sandbagged. I don't want to think about that too much.

The thing about a flood, at least in our case, is the anticipation. It all kind of happens in slow motion, except not. The water only rises a few inches an hour, so it's not like you'll be standing next to it and then suddenly be under it. But it sure is inexorable. Rumors have been flying: the water treatment plant is going to fail; we're going to lose power; the bridge upstream is going to collapse and cause a tsunami downstream; etc.

I haven't even mentioned the people in the floodplain who have already lost their homes.

Now I'm at home—high and dry, a mile from the river—and about to jump on my bike and head over to Lit Mag's temporary digs in another department's conference room and deal with the stuff we threw into boxes.

Today is sunny and breezy. The birds are chirping. Looking out my window here at home, I could mistake it for a perfect summer's day.

Poor College Town (a.k.a. Iowa City)!

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Rain, Rain

Areas of College Town are flooding, but since I live on high ground this fact hadn't really penetrated my tiny brain. Then I got this mass e-mail regarding the building where I work, let's call it Toxic Mold Building,* which is located by the river:
"Please consider what you would need to remove from Toxic Mold Building if given a 24 hour notice that you would have to move out and not be able to return to Toxic Mold Building for at least 1 month."
Ominous. The last thing Toxic Mold Building needs is to be inundated. That would only encourage more toxic mold.

And how would I figure out what I would need from the office to do my work for the next month? Rain, rain, go away.

* I have no evidence of there being toxic mold in my building, but it is commonly believed that there is something "off" about the atmosphere in the building. Although that could have emotional as well as material causes.

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Al Fresco

I made the Niçoise salad from The Urban Vegan, using greens from the Amish guy at the farmers' market, and we ate it on the front porch. Delicious.

After months of propagandizing myself with podcasts of Vegan Freak Radio, I've been trying to eat as vegan as possible given my laziness and lack of willpower.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

No-Drive Summer?

After spending $30 on gas (and my tank was only half empty) yesterday, I biked to my therapy appointment this morning, biked to the bike shop*, biked to a doctor's appointment,** biked to work, biked to the library, and will bike home shortly. I want to make my tank of gas last the whole summer. I don't have to go anywhere, really—except for Sweden, heh. On which more later.

* Because I had a flat and Veg fixed it; she wanted me to take it in to make sure the tire was back on OK. It was! This picture is Veg making adjustments.

** Where I got a sour male resident at first, who clearly had no idea, and asked me surprising and unsettling questions about my psychiatric and gynecological history (I was there for a rash on my chin, people!!), and said he was going to consult with "his staff," and then reappeared with an older female doctor, clearly his supervisor, who was awesome and who knew exactly what to prescribe. His staff. Sheesh. Sorry, I HATE bad doctors.