Saturday, April 14, 2012

I heart Elvis Costello


This post has nothing to do with the house, but everything to do with great rock & roll. Greg and I saw Elvis Costello & the Imposters last night. I'd seen EC 2 or 3 times before, but this was by far the best show. Truly fantastic. Best set EVER! (Well, except that he skipped Everyday I Write the Book, but that's understandable given that he doesn't really like the song).

Highlights for me:
- He played Veronica! He never plays that. And it wasn't on the Spectacular Spinning Songbook. Such a surprising moment that I teared up. (Note that I tried to convince Greg to name our first baby Veronica after this song, but no dice.)
- He played Allison and then segued into Over the Rainbow and finally into There's a Time for Us Somewhere (please, Broadway Mafia, have mercy on me) from West Side Story. Wow. Awesome.
- I Want You played live is really spectacular any time, and he was in great form last night.
- In addition to his own stellar songbook, he covered Nick Lowe, Rolling Stones, Chuck Berry, Johnny Cash and the Beatles.
- Steve Nieve really rocked it out on a couple of songs.
- They closed it out with Peace, Love and Understanding.

Set list here:

I remain in awe. EC is my hero.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Leedy House in print...for reals!

It's an Easter miracle! Our house is in a magazine—Portland Monthly, to be exact.

And really it's a Prutting and Co. miracle, as they featured out house prominently in their large ad in the Real Estate and Garden issue of PM, page 43. Check it.


Andrew and the Prutting team, thanks for the lovely images and for the local press. I hope you get gobs of leads from this. Oh, and if you are salivating over the staircase railings pictured, send Greg some props as that's his most prominent design contribution.

If you want to pick up a copy of your own, it looks like this:


Famous!

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Party in the house

We're having a celebratory dinner party tonight, who-hoo! Paul, Amy, Andrew and Juliana are coming over for dinner and to hang out in the beautiful house that we all made.

Victory!

Friday, January 27, 2012

Rumours

Word on the street is that our house passed its final inspection today. Need to confirm, but if true, this is FANTASTIC!

WHO-HOOOOOO!!!!

Friday, January 13, 2012

G'day new house numbers

Headed to Australia in a few hours. I can't recall the last time I was this excited to go on a business trip. I wonder what I'll see/do/buy. Who-hoo! Adventure is out there.

We put new house numbers on the house and they look smashing, if I do say so myself.


Nifty, eh?


Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Sometimes procrastination does bite

Crap. I waited until yesterday to buy a couple of gifts, including one for Greg and two that I need for a gift exchange in Ohio the week after xmas. Threadless.com suggested that if I order by the 19th (that's yesterday, right?), that UPS Ground would get me my goodies by xmas eve. So I did that. I figured even if I missed Saturday, Monday would still work (Greg's gift would be late but the Ohio gifts would be in hand before I depart first thing Tuesday). Easy peasy.

Well, now USP is telling me estimated delivery Tuesday afternoon. Argh. That's not good.

Attempt #1 to solve problem -- try to contact Threadless to change the order address. But there's not phone number listed. ARGH. Really? You can't even give me a phone number? I just ordered product from you and it's hung up in a transit limbo. I want to call you. Giant sigh.

Attempt #2 to solve problem -- pay $40 to UPS for their premium account status so that I can change the address mid-stream and have it delivered to my sister's address in Ohio. Expensive...but perfect! Except that the UPS site a) won't confirm that I've got the premium service, and b) it can't connect my tracked package (clearly visible on the site) with my account even though the addresses are EXACTLY THE SAME. I cannot underestimate how annoying this is.

So I called UPS. Three times. The first time, I was told I needed to wait 90 minutes for premium to kick in. So I waited and nothing happened. The next call, I was told that it was a technical support issue and was promptly connected to technical support, which was closed for the evening. (When is tech support closed earlier than the other phone support areas?!) So I waited some more, and still nothing happened. I called back and now the entire phone support system is shut down until morning (even though the first gal happily told me I could call back "anytime"). Is 10:20 p.m. Pacific not a part of anytime?

Holy cow, I am mad. And without my presents. This sucks. I suppose I should have bought locally crafted goodies with birds on them.


Friday, December 16, 2011

Zoo bus to hell

I chaperoned a Kindergarten field trip on Thursday with 36 kids, 2 teachers and 7 or so other parents. It was a well-intentioned affair, but it went south in a major way on the transportation front. Here are the impossible-to-dream-up events:
  • Hired tour bus #1 makes it 25 miles out of town and promptly breaks down. We must pull over at a rest stop to assess the situation. Adults have to entertain kids for about 2 hours while we await the new bus. We trot the kids off into the woods surrounding the rest stop for some "learning."
  • We get on bus #2, which is festooned with xmas lights and is blasting out Barry Manilow tunes. One kid locks himself in the lav for a short while, but we jimmy the door and free him. We make it safely to the Newport Aquarium (3 hrs. from PDX), where we now have a grand total of 1.5 hours to explore before we must return.
  • Bus #2 takes off but we are assured that another bus will pick us up. That bus shows up an hour late. And is mysteriously similar to Bus #1.
  • We ride Bus #1/Bus #3 for about 25 miles out of town, where it promptly breaks down. Again. Seriously? Adults have to entertain kids for about 1.75 hours while we await the new bus. We now have no power and no real food or water, but we do have a country store. We hang out with country store dude and his dogs, eating slim jims and peanut butter sandwiches. We have to buy flashlights as it's dark and we have no power on Bus #1/Bus #3.
  • Bus #4 shows up; a school bus this time as opposed to a tour bus. Also, a state trooper shows up with a flood light to help escort the 36 little kids across the highway to the school bus. Yay for "Spike," the new bus driver and the unnamed state trooper!
  • Spike gets us far up the road toward Portland. With about 25 miles to go, the emergency exit alarm starts going off incessantly. The emergency exit door is malfunctioning. We must pull over at a rest stop to assess the situation. The rest stop at which we pull over is THE SAME REST STOP we were at 10 hours ago during breakdown #1. We're now living in some kind of dark cosmic downward spiral from which we might never escape.
  • Spike decides we'll just have to carry on with the malfunction, so we drive the final 25 miles with an alarm screeching.
  • We finally make it to the school 3 hours later than expected. Teachers, parents and kids burst into applause (and for a few, into tears, to be sure).
Notes to self:
  • Celia's teacher is pretty darn cool. And cool tempered. She saved the day from certain doom.
  • Chaperoning a field trip comes with risks.
  • Due to the aforementioned risks, think twice before volunteering again.