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DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 19 May 26 - 09:56 PM Sandra, when looking at your heron and mine it seems clear that they are direct descendants from dinosaurs! You have some great names for the birds in that park (Noisy Miner, Tawny Frogmouth, Willie Wagtail). It was a loud and rainy afternoon and evening, so though there isn't much rain in the morning forecast tomorrow, I'll learn early if it is still too wet still to paint for the remaining touch-ups. I looked out the window this afternoon in time to see two of the volunteer fire department folks loading their truck with those 4x4 posts that were free at the curb. It seems that away from work one them them has chickens and is making enclosures that can use sturdy posts to frame the base. Excellent! This evening I emptied a forgotten bin that had some really old potatoes, and just for the heck of it I planted four of them in the garden plot. There were small potatoes growing on the rotting larger ones that might sprout. They may also just decompose into the garden and never make an appearance. The rest are going into the compost bin. After a long absence from the sewing studio I'm going to go work on a couple of small projects this evening. |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 20 May 26 - 02:00 AM we have some good bird names - an old mild insult was to call someone a Drongo scroll to the end (Culture) for the insult, or a Galah, again scroll down for the Cultural References And a cockatoo was the bloke outside an illegal gambling venue who kept an eye out for police & a cockie farmer was a poor farmer cos teh cockatoos ate his crops. |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 20 May 26 - 10:44 AM Not surprising that there are no painters this morning, I suspect paint would be really weird on the moist surfaces, with humidity at 93% right now. Like trying to make a bandaid stick to wet skin. Tomorrow is forecast to be quite wet (and I have a rescheduled hair appointment) - I think it might not be until next week before the work is finished. I've started another round of what would be considered late-spring cleaning. Sweeping and vacuuming so far, but next I need to wash windows and mirrors and clean various counters and table tops (most have some kind of cloth or clear vinyl covering to protect wood). Wash some of the winter lap quilts and put them away. Most mornings I drink a mug of hot tea, but as of today it's time for a seasonal switch and 1. make it a smaller cup and 2. mostly drink iced tea. With this humidity the tea has me breaking into a sweat. patty, what kind of rocks or minerals did you go looking for on your latest trip? I was just looking at the rocks that have been moved around during the painting prep - lots of local limestone fossils. My favorites in the bunch are the round sea urchins. (I tend to bring rocks home and line them up somewhere, on window sills or the outside potting bench, or stack them on top of the stacked rock walls. Mixed in are a lot of quartz crystals picked up in Arkansas.) |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: pattyClink Date: 20 May 26 - 10:46 AM " I heave Inner Sydney" tickled me. I see a ship's mate hollering "stand by to heave yer Sydneys, boys!" |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 20 May 26 - 11:33 AM > I see a ship's mate hollering "stand by to heave > yer Sydneys, boys!" Only if it's mess time, and he knows the cook's got it in for the crew. |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 20 May 26 - 06:06 PM The next time the painters are back it will be to finish the trim around doors and windows, so today I'm washing windows and glass doors. The decorative bars make it difficult to reach some of them, and as warm and muggy as it is, the work is slow going. I have bars to paint also, with a couple of them close to being finished from the last time I painted. Time to get out the step ladder because the window tops are all out of my reach and maybe finish painting (the paint on the bars over the guest room was almost finished last time I worked on them, I don't remember why I didn't finish.) |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Stilly River Sage Date: 21 May 26 - 10:32 AM The prospect of replacing window screens can be a math nightmare, both in ordering exactly the right size and in suffering the sticker shock. Part of the repairs after the hail is replacing a few, and I've opted to go with the old fashioned Marvin Adjustable screens for a couple of windows. I might order the fancy ones for the front of the house later. The thing about these screens on single-hung windows with decorative iron bars, it's almost impossible to the the old ones out without destroying them and fitting the new full-sized ones in looks impossible unless it is a window with unlocking bars (bedroom windows). Another job is to power wash the fence and the next door neighbors have such a washer. I asked about borrowing it and seem to have set in motion the tuneup process (dig out of back of garden shed, change oil, spark plug, etc.) that I hadn't intended. However, once it is tuned up I'm pretty confident that they'll go ahead and use it on a couple of things at their house as well. Now that I have the spark plug wrench and gap measuring thingie I can offer those to help with the job. We have a series of rain events washing over us until Memorial Day, so we agreed to wait until at least Tuesday before the paint touch-up is finished. In the meantime my handyman came by and trimmed a couple of large dead branches from the vitex out front and they're cut small and stacked at the curb (the village published new requirements for bulky waste and he keeps a photo of the letter in his phone to be sure people know the reason he is now cutting stuff so small.) No more quarterly mountains of whatever dragged to the curb. Now on Fridays only it has to be about 3'x3'x6' or the size of a smallish sofa. I'd call that a loveseat, but whatever. |
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Subject: RE: DECLUTTER: *Health *Progress - 2026** From: Charmion Date: 21 May 26 - 11:20 AM I’d call that a settee. The loveseat, properly speaking, is a Victorian novelty piece with its two seats facing in opposite directions and an S-shaped divider. Now that the trees are in full leaf, most of my back yard is shaded all or most of the time. The sunniest part is on the deck, so I guess it’s time to investigate containers. I’ll plant something that likes shade in front of the fence — astilbe, perhaps, and hellebores if I can find any that will grow in Ottawa. |
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