Saturday, March 8, 2008

Bamboo in... almost.

So the guys came this morning to install the flooring in the Dharma Wagon. I was asleep when they arrived at 8:00am despite my attempting to set an alarm last night. The DM (Dharma Wagon) is right outside my bedroom window so I was awakened by their voices and scuffling about out there as they set up their tools.

I directed them to the nine boxes of flooring in the back of the SUV, and made sure they had already eaten breakfast.

I came back in and made myself some tea. Went out and started taking photos, explaining to them it was so I could have before, during and after shots for posterity. I think they thought that was strange, but they smiled and acted as if they understood and it was perfectly normal.

The beginning:

They started and things seemed to be going smoothly when they suddenly hit a snag. The original flooring was some sort of ceramic, not linoleum, so the nails were bending instead of anchoring properly so they had to rip up the old flooring!

The middle:

Wasted about two or three hours on that, plus I had to go to the store and buy a couple floor scrapers which were about $25 each. Not expensive exactly for a tool, but for a single use tool, yuck!

After that things went pretty smoothly. I tore out all the old baseboard molding and we're going to replace it.

I went into Sebastopol to get their cash and some sandwiches for everyone, came back and we all ate lunch.


They got most of the floor done after lunch but they will have to come back another day to finish it up the small section they didn't have time to complete, and to do the various little trimming things we discussed. Mainly the baseboards, moving out the stove and fridge and repairing some upper cabinet molding.

The (almost) end!

As you can see, I need to add baseboards and do some serious cleaning.

After they left I was off to the hardware store again to pick up the rest of the stuff I need:

* 80' baseboard molding
* 2 8' 2x4s
* 1 sheet 3/4" plywood
* 1/4" plywood for some missing paneling
* Murphy's wood cleaning supplies

I only got some of the moldings, as I wanted to check how a few different ones looked in place before committing to 80 feet (the shit is not as cheap as I had hoped). I found some that seems to work really well, but it was dark by the time I got home with it so that was only by flashlight. I will double check in the daylight.

After I got home I stained and varnished a few pieces of wood for the Dharma Wagon and cleaned up my brushes and crap.

Came inside and sliced some mango (those sandwiches were huge and we ate lunch late), shared with Dominic who learned the name immediately and has been coming in every few minutes and saying "mango?!" in his cute little questioning yet demanding baby voice ever since.

The bamboo looks SO BEAUTIFUL in there, the color is perfect and once the grubby stains along the baseboards are covered with new moldings it will be superduper!

Julie is watching "Rock of Love with Bret Michaels" in the other room, I feel like puking. I have a very low tolerance for this reality show bullshit. But I have to admit I am amused by Celebrity Rehab, and "Lock Up" can be pretty interesting. But these VH1 "reality" dating shows... give me a huge break! What I hate most is how they suck me in if I don't think about it, and the next thing I know I am talking to the television calling people mean names.


I still have a lot of cleaning to do etc, but it is very close to being ready for me to move in! I am still not sure what to do about the whole insulation issue (the thing is over 50 years old so the insulation is definitely shot).

I don't think I'll try to tackle it now, but hopefully I will deal with it before summer and can get it insulated, certainly before next winter. Doing the insulation in the walls is a little scary, the prospect of tearing out the paneling without destroying the walls makes me a little nervous. I'll probably just do some testing in the bathroom walls since that is turning into a a storage closet anyway. The stuff underneath the trailer needs to be done too--the paneling that holds the fiberglass insulation in place is sagging in areas. I am hoping Poppop can help me with some rigid stuff he suggested.

Off to read for a bit and go to sleep. I want to be early to maximize the usable sunlight for cleaning in the DW (Dharma Wagon).

Whatever,

nevermind.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

Welcome, Dharma Wagon!




She made it to Twigland safe and sound. Now begins the project. First figure out which fixtures inside will stay, then install the bamboo flooring, then work on polishing the walls and cabinets etc, fixing and replacing the small details like hardware on closets and little bits of missing or peeling trim. I'm excited and daunted all at once.

Family Dinner

Gramma LuLu came over to spend the day and brought beautiful flowers, wine and cupcakes.

I made mini cheese cakes, we had lunch, then Poppop stopped by and we gave him a cheese cake for his birthday (tomorrow). He left, and later Jor came over and we all cooked a fabulous feast together. Julie and Jor did most of the work, while I photographed and then made instructables after everyone left. Jor made this amazing pesto rustico and Julie did a delicious blackened salmon which was topped with Jor's pesto. This pesto is not processed, so the pine nuts are whole and the basil is just rough chopped... and it is so good I am definitely going to make it regularly.

It was a really nice day, and very nice having all this family close enough to hang out with now.
Dominic said Jor as Jor was leaving. He's such a smarty-pants.

Here's a photo of the dinner party:

Gramma Lulu, baby Bubba, sister Julie, sister Rupa, brother Jor.

And a photo of the dinner:

Monday, March 3, 2008

Paneer for breakfast.

I made fresh paneer last night and did an instructable for it.


Yum. Fresh paneer and blueberries.

Also, Mom brought us a nice aloe vera plant.
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eBay tips

Donna wrote to ask if I had any tips for selling on eBay. I have two super important tips.

  1. Photos, photos, photos!
  2. Use auctiva.com

I have sold on eBay off and on for several years. I am just about to start in earnest again, but I am so irritated with their greed that I prefer to use CraigsList whenever possible. Especially for larger things like furniture.

With small things or collectible/more valuable things, eBay tends to be better because it reaches a broader market, obviously, so you are certain to get more for them. Plus, it's always nice when there is a bidding war for something. The key to selling things in any online forum is to take lots of photos and try to take them in detail and in good light. I think the more photos, the longer a person has to get attached to an item and decide it must be theirs (if they wanted it to begin with). At least that's my dime-store psychology philosophy.

Don't pay eBay to host your photos. Use AUCTIVA. It is the best free program for eBay sellers. I loved it when I was doing a lot of eBay selling.

Also with Auctiva you can schedule your sales to start (and thus end) at a time when a lot of people will likely be online, rather than the time that is most convenient for you to create the listing. In my case I tended to create listings in the middle of the night, but scheduled them to start/end at around 8 or 9 pm East coast time, so people would be home all over the US. Also start/end on the weekend are great.

eBay charges to schedule your listing time, but Auctiva does all that for free. They also have neat templates you can use to make your listing more festive or specific to your merchandise. Those are free, and eBay would charge you for that also.

Basically, all the things that eBay charges for, Auctiva lets you add for free, so you just pay the basic listing and final value fees to eBay, which are already shamefully greedy!

Go check it out, and if you have any questions just email me, I would be more than happy to help you with them.