Friday, October 31, 2014

Happy (Belated) Halloween

Author's note: Oops, I thought I scheduled this to post on Halloween, but it obviously didn't go up, so here it is now. 

I'll be working all day, so I don't plan on doing anything for Halloween, but I did take my dogs to PetSmart in costume last week to get their pictures taken. So I'll leave you with a few pictures for Halloween.

Here's the group shot. I had to sit down to get Bob to hold still, he wanted to get outta there. Also, the big dogs wouldn't look at the camera until I sat with them.

Danger, the cowardly lion

Bob the hot dog

Jonesy the pumpkin

Tuesday, October 28, 2014

I Had a Bad Day

Do you ever have one of those days where you end up regretting your choice to even get out of bed in the morning? Well, that was me yesterday. It started out with getting up and finding a spider in the shower, which is not really a big deal, but it was apparently a sign of things to come. When I got to work, I was locked outside and ended up having to clock in ten minutes late even though it was the manager's fault I wasn't on time.

This spider was in the sink a couple weeks ago, but it was the same kind in the shower

The morning at work didn't go very well, but it was over quickly enough. As I was driving home, my car started to feel weird (so descriptive, I know). The steering all of the sudden felt odd, but I was close to home so I just drove the rest of the way home. When I got there, I realized I had a completely flat tire. My spare tire is a regular tire, but since it's almost November I opted to just put my snow tires on anyway.

Of course, changing my tires didn't go smoothly at all. I change my tires myself because it's not that hard. My dad insisted that all of his kids should know how to change their own tires before they got their driver's licenses. That way if any of us had a flat tire, we didn't have to sit around helplessly waiting for someone else to fix it for us. Anyway, the wheels on the snow tires I have require a puzzle lock for the lug nuts (which means someone can't just take a lug wrench and loosen the nuts) and those were giving me trouble.

The second wheel that I changed was stuck in place and my dad had to come outside and kick it loose for me, which I've never had happen before. After I moved to the other side of the car, the ominous clouds finally let loose with some light rain and sleet, just what I wanted. The last step was to take my summer wheels/tires to the shed for storage over winter. I'll need new tires next summer anyway, so I didn't bother with trying to fix the flat.

See the exposed steel belt on the bottom of that top tire? So lucky it didn't blow out on me.
My dad stores tires/wheels for everyone in the family because he has two decently sized sheds for storage. So my wheels had to be stacked on top of my brother's summer tires and as I was stacking the second to last of my own wheels (about 5 and half feet off the floor at this point), the wheel slipped and whacked me really hard upside the head. At this point, I'd had enough and I just started crying. Plus, it really did hurt, the side of my head is still in pain today.

Once all the wheels were safely stacked up, I decided to call it a day. It was only about 3PM, but when you've had enough, you've had enough. How many car wheels have to hit you in the head before you give up, anyway? I came into the house, changed into my pajamas and laid down on the bed with a book. The rest of the day was pretty uneventful, except for a malfunctioning cable remote when I tried to sit and watch TV for a little while.

At bed time, I decided to ice the side of my head because it was throbbing. Of course, this was the wrong thing to do because when I finished up with the ice, my head hurt even more. I think the sore spot was just so sensitive that pressing hard ice up against it made it worse. I took some ibuprofen and went to sleep.

I guess my flat tire wasn't such a bad thing in the end because it did just go gradually flat when it could have completely blown out. I don't even want to think about what could've happened had that tire blown out going 75MPH on the freeway (which is the speed limit on my way to work). I do also have 6 months notice to start saving up money for new tires next summer. Still, I'm hoping that today goes a lot better because when I have bad days, it just tends to pile on.

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Cooking Adventures

A few days ago, I was at the store with my sister, intending to buy ingredients for a fried rice recipe I had come across online that sounded good. After pricing out a few of the ingredients, I decided to wait until I find shrimp on sale (because I was surprised at how expensive it is). I did, however, notice that sushi rice was pretty inexpensive when I was looking at jasmine rice for the fried rice recipe. On impulse, I bought the sushi rice and some SPAM because I had been interested in making SPAM musubi.

Here's my SPAM musubi finished product
 
The next day, I decided to also get the ingredients to make California rolls. I had sushi rice, why not make sushi, right? California rolls are pretty simple, so I decided to start there, no raw fish to worry about. I went to the store to buy rice vinegar, nori (roasted seaweed used in making sushi), avocado, cucumber and imitation crab meat.

Then I had to go to three different stores to find a bamboo mat for rolling the sushi. I had looked up online where to buy one, but had no luck actually figuring out where it was in the first two stores. I should have started out at the local Asian food market because their nori was also half the price I had paid for it elsewhere.

When I went home, I decided to make SPAM musubi first because it was going to be the simpler of the two planned dishes. The longest part of the recipe was cooking the sushi rice, but it came out pretty well. It's a very sticky rice, so some of it was stuck to the bottom of the pan, but I had enough to make my musubi. The SPAM was sliced and fried up with a little bit of soy sauce and sugar. Then, assembling them was done by placing the strips of nori and forming the rice into compressed piles about the size of the SPAM patties and sprinkling it with furikake (a rice seasoning). Once, the nori was wrapped around, they were ready to go! They turned out really good and I'll definitely be making them again.

The successful California rolls




I was more concerned about how well the sushi was going to turn out because California rolls are made inside out - with the rice on the outside and nori on the inside. I figured, if nothing else, I'd have piles of California roll to eat with a spoon instead of a neat little roll to eat by hand. I spread the rice across the nori and sprinkled a little furikake over it because I didn't have roasted sesame seeds, then flipped the whole thing over (which was dicey, but I did it).

After placing the inside ingredients on the nori, it came time to roll up the sushi. I managed to get it rolled up pretty easily, but then when I unrolled the bamboo mat, the actual hardest part of making the sushi came into play: cutting it into smaller pieces. The first roll mostly fell apart, probably because I hadn't quite rolled it tight enough. The second roll managed to produce some nice, photo worthy pieces. I shared a few pieces with my family who said it tasted just like any California roll they'd had at a restaurant.

Here's the beauty shot

So, the bottom line to all of this is if there's something out there that you've been wanting to cook, but were afraid...go for it! It might be fun, it might be a disaster, but you never know until you try. That lesson can easily apply to a lot of other things, and I'm sure it's one you've heard before. Still, it's important to remind ourselves that it's okay to go outside your comfort zone once in a while, even if it's in a small way like trying to make sushi. Worst case scenario, you have a big mess in your kitchen and a pile of sushi ingredients to eat.

Saturday, October 18, 2014

I Think I'm Trying to Break My Own Nose

On Tuesday, my sister's little dachshund mix, Bob Barker was visiting for the night. I was sitting on the sofa with a blanket over my lap because it was a little chilly in the living room. At one point, I leaned forward to throw the blanket over my feet because they came out from under the covers. This is the exact moment that Bob chose to jump into my life. So you can picture what happened next...little dog skull straight to the bridge of my nose.

Bob Barker - who doesn't look big, but can pack a wallop when he jumps into your nose with his skull
It hurt for a few minutes, but never bled and when I woke up the next day I had no bruises or anything. I thought I'd be on my merry way and forget about the incident, but then Thursday morning, I managed to smash myself across the bridge of the nose with a somewhat heavy metal object at work. It hurt bad enough at the time that it actually brought tears to my eyes. The most frustrating part to me was that I totally can't blame it on anyone else. You know, at least if it resulted from the dog hitting me, I could blame it on him. But this was all me.

I went to examine my face in the bathroom mirror and noticed a red mark that wasn't too obvious. Again, no resulting nosebleed, so yay for that. When I was a kid, I had some really nasty nosebleeds (like the umm...maybe we need to go see a doctor ASAP kind). You know, the sort where you're not sure if it's okay to lose that much blood and it's just not stopping.  Those started when I moved with my family to Colorado and quit after a while, so my mom just assumed it was related to the higher elevation and lower humidity

Yesterday, I worked the first full day at my new job (just got hired on Wednesday and it was a long 11 hour shift). Fortunately, I'm outside all day with sunglasses on so no one noticed that I had two partial black eyes. Including me. I guess when I was doing my hair in front of the mirror in the morning I just didn't notice the bruises. It took until I glanced up at myself in the mirror at my first job this morning to see that I had some really dark spots around the bridge of my nose. The bridge is still sore too, but never swelled up too much, it just feels like someone whacked it, which I kind of did.

I was there when I hit myself in the face and my first thought was still, "Gee, it looks like I didn't get enough sleep last night, even though I got a good 8 hours in." No one said anything about it all morning, so I guess it's not extremely obvious that I have a couple black eyes. Or else they all assume I'm in an abusive relationship and they don't want to say anything about it. I guess I might be in an abusive relationship with myself because I keep trying to break my own nose. I leaned into a dog jumping into my face and then whacked myself with a heavy object, I don't what else you could call that. Other than my usual clumsy self, that is.

*Blog news*

So I mentioned that I got hired to a new job this week and I'm not sure what that means here. In case anyone is actually reading it, I don't plan on quitting the blog, there's just no guarantee as to how often I'll be able to post. For the time being, I'm keeping both jobs until I figure out whether the new one is something I will be able to do long term. I just hope I remember to go to both jobs and don't completely space out going to a shift at either one some day. For at least a little while, I could potentially be working 6-7 days a week and maybe upwards of 60 hours (not that I'm complaining, working a ton is so much better than lousy part time hours and not being sure if you can pay all your bills).

Friday, October 10, 2014

Lunar Eclipse

In case you missed it, early Wednesday morning there was a full lunar eclipse. I set my alarm clock for 3AM and put on some warm clothes to go outside and watch the eclipse. The dogs looked at me like I was crazy, but joined me outside. I took my camera, tripod and a comfy chair and spent two hours watching the earth's shadow fall across the moon. After the eclipse was full, my feet were cold, so I gave up and went back to bed.

There was a layer of thin clouds during the whole eclipse, so some of my images came out a little fuzzy or hazy looking because of that fact. The rest of the post will just be pictures from the eclipse. Enjoy!


The shadow starts to fall across the moon
Almost halfway there
Almost fully eclipsed
Nearly completely eclipsed and looking like a blood moon
Fully eclipsed moon

Monday, October 6, 2014

Winter Is Coming

The weather for the last week here has definitely reminded us that winter is just around the corner. One morning, I was totally unprepared for the fact that I had to actually scrape some ice off my car on my way to work. I leave for work at 5:30AM, so it's dark out at that hour and the temperature was cool enough for the dew to freeze on my windows. Fortunately, since I live in Colorado I keep the ice scraper in the car 365 days a year (you just never know) so I only had to fetch it out of the trunk.

My dad asked me to go with him on Friday to get some firewood in preparation of winter. I have this nasty habit of agreeing to do things without thinking about them, so I naturally said yes immediately. Our neighbors have property up in the mountains and since the pine beetle infestation has killed off a lot of their trees, they don't mind us going up and taking some firewood each year. There's a wood stove insert in the fireplace in the living room, so when the temperatures drop my dad likes to have a fire going because it drops the heating bill dramatically.

Snow-capped peaks around Berthoud Pass
So I got up early on my day off and we headed off for the two hour drive to our neighbor's property. There were still some fall colors on the trees, but about half of the trees had dropped all or most of their leaves. Going over the mountain pass, it was clear that it had recently snowed as the pine trees were dusted in snow as well as the peaks. We had decided to bring the dogs along so that they could run around on the property while we worked. On the way up, they had the whole bed of the truck to themselves because my dad has a topper on his truck. The ride home was going to be less cozy as the back would be full of wood, so they would ride inside the cab with us.

When we arrived, my dad set out to getting his chainsaw started up (which did not go well initially) and then he started cutting up a downed tree. My job was loading the cut up tree into the back of the truck so that we could drive up to the garage where they had a hydraulic log splitter. If you've never tried to manually split wood, let me tell you, the hydraulic splitter is a fantastic tool. It seriously saved some time and labor on the wood splitting.

Lots of exploring was done
 The dogs got to run around the yard. My dad's dog Danger had a rope tied to his harness because he is mostly well behaved, but has a habit of getting far away from us at the dog park and pretending not to hear us. He brought a rope for Jonesy as well, but he stayed close to us and I never have to call him twice if he does start to wander off. The large land area around their cabin was fenced, but the dogs could've easily gotten out if we got busy and weren't paying attention.

Dad at work
A squirrel sat high up in one of the live trees and dropped pine cones down on the dogs until Jonesy realized what was happening and chased it off. The squirrel was not happy and was probably never faced with dogs there before. I think the dogs ended up thoroughly enjoying their time away from the city. Us humans, however ended up with sore muscles from our hard work, but it will pay off when
the cold temperatures come and the heating bills don't go up.

Look at that smile
By the end of the day, we had managed to cut up nearly two trees and had the back of my dad's truck filled up to the roof of the topper. The dogs were tired and had to be somewhat crammed into the back of the truck. Fortunately, the ride home wasn't too bad because Friday traffic can be a nightmare, but it only took a little longer than the ride up. Probably the worst thing was coming home to stack up the wood in the backyard after sitting in the truck and having muscles stiffen up. My dad appreciated my help though because it would've taken him twice as long to do it all himself and I got a free lunch out of it.
Don't they look cozy?