Friday, July 20, 2007

Freaking raccoons...

So, raccoons have gotten into our garden and eaten the tomatoes from our tomato plants. We have had the opportunity to eat exactly one, little bastards. Makes me want to stay out at night with a bee-bee gun. There used to be entire clusters of big, green tomatoes that were ripening at the bottom of the plant and now there's *nothing*, and the greedy buggers have broken some of the top parts of the plant, hauling their fat, furry asses up there to eat my freaking tomatoes.

I'm usually an animal lover, but I think I'm going to have to make an exception. I was so looking forward to eating things from our garden, and now it's all freaking gone. At least they haven't started on the herbs - there will really be barbecued raccoon for dinner if that happens.

Monday, July 16, 2007

Cursed


So we (“we” being me, Special K, and AS) took a road trip up to Troy, NY to see the lovely Miss M performing with the Bakerloo Theatre Project, as she has done for the past two years, this marking her third. They focus on classics, performing a play by Shakespeare and one other from another playwright. This season they’re calling it the Cursed Season – performing Macbeth and The Imaginary Invalid, a play by Moliere that he was performing in when he died. Both are considered to be spectacularly unlucky plays and have a long history of misfortune befalling the actors and companies who perform them. Macbeth is considered so unlucky that some very superstitious actors won't refer to it by name, and simply call it "The Scottish Play". I’m generally not one for superstition and the like, so I was simply looking forward to a good evening of performances.

We arrived Friday night after a long-ish, but uneventful, drive up to Troy, NY; home of my father’s alma mater, and also home of the company, who is using one of their spaces for their performances. We checked in to our hotel and went out to Brown’s, a local brew pub. Troy used to be an old mill town that definitely had the air taken out of its tires quite a while ago, but there are efforts underway to revitalize it. Brown’s is one of those cool, hip, popular places that is helping Troy make a comeback – there are actually several lovely restaurants in the area.

After dinner we headed over to another restaurant where the cast after-party was going to be held, since we arrived on opening night. We met up with Miss M and had an absolutely lovely time meeting people, re-meeting people we had met last year, and catching up with each other. For being plunked in the middle of a very deep estrogen pool, Special K did well for himself, listening amiably to the chatter of people who have known each other so long that we can finish each other’s sentences (and often did that weekend) and speak in shorthand.

He and I started to fade a little early, so we headed back to the hotel and fell asleep.

The next morning, we met up with Brunette and her Special Someone who came to join us in supporting Miss M. We all had a lovely morning at Miss M’s apartment, munching on banana bread and catching up, before dropping her off at rehearsal. K and I had to actually get cleaned up and ready for our day, so we headed back, letting AS catch up with Brunette and SS. We went to the lovely Illium Café for lunch, where we had a delicious lunch and got to hear all about rehearsals for The Imaginary Invalid which opens this week. Our time with Miss M was over too soon, sadly, and we dropped her off for her afternoon rehearsals and decided to go check out Saratoga Springs, as we’d heard that it’s a lovely place. Fortunately for us, since the numbering of exits on I-87 was confusing me, SS has a GPS unit in his car which directed us to Saratoga Springs. We walked around the lovely little town for a bit, Brunette and I advised AS on some lovely sandals to wear to a wedding she’s going to next weekend, and we stopped at Cold Stone Creamery to get some ice cream on the way back. Not really a good idea for my tummy, but still so tasty.

We met Miss M and went to dinner at an Irish-Mexican place called Jose Malone’s, and here’s where our evening began to go awry… She needed to be at the theater for her call at 7 pm, so we went to dinner around 5:30, thinking that would allow ample time, since it only took about 10 minutes or less to get from anywhere in Troy to anywhere else in Troy. At least, the parts we were interested in. We ordered some chips and salsa to wile away the minutes, as well as some blue cornbread, which was delicious. But that came and went, and we waited. And waited. Eventually, AS got up to say that we were in a hurry and ask if there was some reason for the hold up. They said that they had a very large party in the back that had caused the kitchen to back up, but they would try to move our orders out. Now, we all agreed that this was a perfectly reasonable excuse, but for us to have to ask, instead of having them tell us, was the part we took issue with.

Harrumph.

However, they did bring Miss M’s food out quickly thereafter, and the rest came trickling to the table over the next 15 minutes or so. Unfortunately, they were a little too quick with AS’s food, as it wasn’t cooked all the way. We handed Miss M the keys to Whitey, our 2000 Pontiac Grand Am, and she and AS were off, as K and I stayed with Brunette and SS and we all finished our dinner. While my entrée was quite tasty, others seemed to be underwhelmed, and overall we felt that the wait wasn’t worth it in the end, unfortunately. It’s too bad, because the menu was creative and looked interesting, it just didn’t quite deliver.

We went back to the hotel to change, and headed straight to the theater, where AS was waiting, tickets in hand. The performance of Macbeth was superb. Very inventive and creepy and creative, and quite in line with what we’ve come to expect from Bakerloo – they don’t disappoint. And fortunately, they have been gaining in popularity in the Capital Region (as the Albany-Troy-Schenectady Tri-Cities Region is also known), so these intelligent adaptations are starting to receive some good recognition.

After the show, we retired with Miss M and the cast and crew to the campus pub, where beers were ridiculously cheap (after paying $2.50 for her Magic Hat #9, AS exclaimed “I love it here!”), and the company was exceedingly pleasant. After an hour or two of happily and contentedly chatting, we decided to head for the car and call it a night. Strolling toward the parking lot along the quiet street, we suddenly heard an engine rev into overdrive and someone give a rebel yell as a dark SUV tore down the street. None of us really knew quite what was going on, until we realized that one of us had been pelted with raw eggs – which are quite painful when launched from a fast-moving vehicle, I might add. The costume designer, a lovely guy with a very slender build, wearing a pink ballerina t-shirt, took off after them on foot, but couldn’t catch them. He came back and after ascertaining that everyone was okay, took a long, thoughtful drag on his cigarette before saying “I’d like to slash their #*&@! tires open…”

We bundled everyone into the car (Brunette and SS had left earlier), and went back to Miss M’s summer quarters, then Special K and I set off for the hotel. Coming to a stoplight, we saw a dark SUV with all the windows rolled down, jammed with people, and with a passenger holding something suspiciously egg-shaped in his hand. As we turned the corner I said “I think that was them”, and he said “Yeah. Me, too. Want to follow them?” to which I responded “yes”. So Whitey executed a quick turn in the middle of the street and we went back to the light, only to see that they had gone.

However, since they were only a block or two from the place where we first got egged, I figured that they were targeting that particular strip, and would be back. So we started to circle. Special K had been awfully quiet, mostly because he was pissed off, and I think it felt good to both of us to feel like we were doing something. At last, after about 15 minutes, we saw them heading toward us, and Whitey did another quick turn in the middle of the street. We saw a few more eggs launched from the car, and pulled up behind them at a stoplight. I took down their license plate number as they sped off into the distance, and called Miss M with it, as members of her company had been targeted multiple times in the last few weeks.

So although it didn’t feel quite as good as if I’d watched them get tied down and slapped by a bunch of little girls, there was something very satisfying about hearing Miss M tell me that they’d called the police who said they would comb the area.

Two words for you, kids – “assault” and “vandalism”. And “bastard people”, even though that makes it four. In any case, I have no way of knowing whether or not anything happened to them, but in my head, they ended up crying for their parents to come get them out of jail that night. Little shits.

The next morning, we found out that Brunette and SS had also gotten nailed, so they were happy to hear that they were reported to the police.

We had a nice, though all-too-brief, morning with Miss M before she had to leave for rehearsal and we had to leave for home. The trip was pleasant and uneventful, despite some freakishly heavy rains, until somewhere in the middle of nowhere, Whitey died on us. Just lost power. We coasted over to the side of the road and the car fell silent. K popped the hood and went out to look as long-haul trucks zoomed past us, and AS and I looked at each other with a feeling of “oh, crap” in the air.

He got back in the car, Whitey eventually started back up under protest, and we took off, until he lost power again shortly thereafter. I have to give credit to K, because as much as I know he was stressed out, he remained calm and rational, which is more than I would have done – there would have been much yelling and cursing. K decided that it might be something to do with the cruise control, since it died right after he turned it on the second time. We got the engine running and we set off and made it for about another 45 minutes or so, then Whitey gave it up again. Although we were closer to home than we were an hour before that, we were still a couple hundred miles from home, and not feeling too good about our prospects. We gave it a couple minutes, and once again Whitey roared to life, although under protest. So, keeping all electronics off (meaning 4/60 air conditioning and no music) since we suspected a bad power coil or a bad alternator and in our heads, this seemed like a way not to exacerbate the problem.

We kept going, chatting to pass the time and prove that we were definitely not thinking about what would happen if we got stranded, as we were choosing to be optimistic. Well, K was choosing to be the strong, silent type, and AS and I were chatting about anything and everything. Finally, we felt like we were within striking distance of our home, when outside of Gettysburg, PA, Whitey died again. And there we were, as he refused to come back to life. I called my parents to let them know that we might need an emergency pick-up, and K called our insurance company to get the car towed.

As we were sitting there, a very nice man stopped his truck and came over to look. He didn’t have the tools or equipment to help us, but he said that he also suspected the power coil and said that he was sorry not to be able to help. I thanked him for stopping and taking the time to offer, and he went on his way. I jogged down the road to see the mile marker closest to us, so that we could tell the insurance company. After I got back we tried Whitey one more time, and that engine miraculously turned on one more time. We got back in the car, and drove slowly and carefully south, hoping to make it to our house. My parents called us back and asked us to stop at their house, since it was on our way home, so that we could borrow my dad’s car for a few days while we took care of whatever ailed Whitey. We were grateful for the offer, so we did, indeed, head their way. We made it all the way there, and upon entering were greeted with hugs, air conditioning, and an offer of cold drinks and dinner, which we also gratefully accepted.

My mom is an excellent cook, if I may say so, and we all hungrily devoured the plates of spaghetti that she prepared for us. We sat and chatted for a bit after dinner, then ambled to the door, pulled Whitey into their garage, and set off in my dad’s car to drop AS off at home, and collapse into bed.

By the time I crawled into bed, I was exhausted. Special K put his arm across my stomach, and as we started to drift off to sleep, said “um…what’s that?” I felt where his hand was, and felt something rough that I peeled off my skin. Then I had a very unpleasant thought flash through my head and I turned on the light.

It was a tick.

I have never been so skeeved out in my life, and I immediately bolted out of bed and commenced prancing around like a high-strung thoroughbred, saying such useful things as “EEEEEWWWWW! GETRIDOFITANDKILLITNOW!!!!!”

Not my finest moment, to be sure. K managed to find another one on my hip, then I inspected him and after finding nothing, we called it a night. I would shudder every so often thinking about it, I just couldn't get it out of my head. As he drifted off to sleep, he said “See, Honey? If I hadn’t been groping you, we would never have found the little suckers.” I patted his head and thanked him for his vigilance as I closed my eyes on a very strange weekend.

I blame the Scottish play.

Slackah

(This is actually from the weekend before last - shows how lazy I am, eh?)


Work has been keeping me busy lately, but the cool thing is that it hasn’t been keeping me busy in that late-nights-working-all-weekend kind of way, although there’s still some of that – inevitable in my trade, it would seem. I think it’s helped by Special K’s new assignment that means he has to be in Rosslyn by 8 am, putting me at my desk around 7:45. By the time he leaves his office and gets to me, it’s usually around 5:30 or so, meaning that I’ve been logging 10-hour days – so no wonder I’m getting more done at work. But coming in early doesn’t really faze me much, I actually like it. I just hate staying late, so I’m glad not to have to do it much anymore.

However, all this working has meant that time is flying by. I can’t believe that the summer is more than half over. Gah!!! It’s been a good summer, though. Special K’s mom continues to be on the mend, so that’s a really good thing. She’s been home for a while now, and I’m sure that just having her own familiar surroundings is really helpful in her healing process.

We’ve been able to see friends and family and spent an awesome weekend out at the farm last weekend. There was a little too much alcohol consumed by me and my lovely husband, but that’s why we weren’t planning on driving home that night. There’s something about heading out there to be with our friends K&D, not to be confused with the friends from Wisconsin with the same names who also have a farm. Heading out into Virginia wine country, despite having to be on Rt. 66 to do it (one of the most loathsome roads in the country – I’m surprised it’s not in Connecticut, since I usually reserve my true ire for anything that brings me through there), is a wonderful experience. I can feel myself unwinding as the miles stretch out in front of us, with the Shenandoahs in the distance. It was a gorgeous, sunny weekend, even if it was hot as ass outside. We pulled into the driveway to be boisterously greeted by Mac and Pepper, their two dogs who are totally all bark and no bite. Very sweet-natured dogs (Mac likes to spoon with me) who may greet people loudly, but the tails are always wagging. We made our way over to the new patio, marveling at the recent work they’d had done on their house, and Mac and Pepper decided to resume their prior activity, lying prone in an attempt to cope with the heat. Our friends P&S were also there for the weekend, so we were greeted affectionately and lovely cold beers were soon in our hands as we scampered for shade.

We sat and talked and munched on some delicious appetizers, courtesy of P, and caught up – we hadn’t all been together since K and I got married in March, and K and I hadn’t been out to the farm since October – which is just a crime. No one should be that busy. Although my inability to sit or move without pain for a few months in the middle there, followed by the family health crisis and the trip to Italy may have been contributing factors.

P&S are getting married in September, and I am delighted for them as I think they’re great people individually and are great together. Since I have recently run the wedding planning gauntlet, I have tried to do my best to give them the benefit of our experience whenever needed, which usually starts with P calling me and saying “So, is it Bridezilla of me to do…”, and the answer is inevitably no, because she’s not that kind of person. She doesn’t call it her special day, she hasn’t told any of her friends that they’re not allowed to get pregnant because it would ruin the pictures, and she’s not telling the guests that they must avoid wearing certain colors because they would clash with her colors. But she must be a little nutty, because she did ask if I’d make her wedding cake. I obviously agreed to do it, as I’m very honored that she thinks that much of my baking skills. I’m a little surprised because she’s got eyes and has seen my cake decorating skills (best described as “rustic”), but that’s coolio – I’ve got time to practice, I’ve got friends who will be willing recipients of whatever test runs I come up with – it’s all good.

As dinner approached, P, K, and I, who all met at a very bad former job – leaving there was like defecting from Romania in the 1970s; anything was going to be a step up – decided that we should take the goats and the dogs for a walk before dinner. This is one of my favorite things to do there (mostly because we’ve never done it in winter, I imagine), but it basically consists of strolling down a quiet road, watching the dogs race off in the distance with their tails in the air, and pulling down some tree branches so the goats can munch on the leaves as a snack. And trying not to let the goats totally step on your feet (moderate success). And trying not to step in the large-ish patches of poison ivy (no freaking success at all – fortunately I washed it off with Tecnu, so the impact is minimal). We were strolling and talking chick stuff when we decided that we were getting hungry, and wanted to head back for the delicious dinner that awaited us.

You see, the other cool thing about going to visit K&D is that they have a killer garden, their own chickens, and they’re great cooks. So we had some grilled chicken (not theirs), grilled veggies fresh from the garden, and a salad with a spicy, garlicky sauce that was delicious. I devoured my dinner, and even in my inebriated state, I was coherent enough to know it was delicious. K did likewise and then quickly realized that he had made a mistake. I was busy wiping barbecue sauce off my face and hands (it wasn’t pretty) as he excused himself. Pobrecito. It took him a little while, but he later emerged ready to face the evening again. Fortunately, he had sobered up considerably, so he took the lead on managing the bonfire. There is just something about sitting out by a bonfire with your friends, sipping wine, and listening to good music. Nothing compares.

Eventually I started to drift off to sleep (this tends to happen with me), so K and I decided to head to bed. Fortunately, we did so by way of the hot tub, which was soooo nice. K woke me up before I drowned in the tub, and we went to bed. I actually managed to sleep in the next morning, and woke to the smell of sausages grilling and some homemade quiche, with veggies from the garden and eggs from the chickens, baking in the oven.

That is not a bad way to wake up, let me tell you.

I stumbled into the kitchen, following the delicious smells, and stepped outside to greet everyone. It was approximately the same temperature as the surface of the sun by 9:30 in the morning, so that didn’t last too long. But I tried. We sat down to munch on breakfast, which was so very tasty, and continued our chatter from the night before. It’s nice to be around a group of people and have it feel effortless, and it’s also nice to have that effortlessness last more than a day. I think it’s easy to do in small doses, but one of the signs to me that we’re all likely to be stuck with each other for a while is that it doesn’t wear off. It’s a good thing – and one of the reasons why I feel really lucky to have the people in my life that I have.

After they foolishly asked to see all of our wedding and Italy pictures, K and I decided to wrap things up and head home – we were going to head to a Nats game, but the thought of all the work I had to do that evening ended up redirecting the car so that I could go home and hook up the laptop. Bleah.

For whatever reason, I couldn’t sleep that night. Every little noise kept me up – even Special K’s breathing kept me up. Not snoring, breathing. Granted, it was loud breathing that sometimes edged into snoring territory, but it was still primarily breathing. At one point, I thought I nudged him to get him to turn over – apparently I jabbed him in the gut with my elbow.

Whoops. That was totally not my plan.

I ended up working from home the next day because I figured that I wouldn’t get much done through an entire day at the office on a grand total of 1 ½ hours of sleep. So I got a lot done from the house, took the inevitable nap in the afternoon, and picked my computer back up after dinner. It wasn’t exactly the perfect end to the perfect weekend – but the weekend itself was just about perfect.