Sunday, April 29, 2007

A day in the 'hood...

Cherry tree is in full white fluff mode. Thought I'd take one last photos of the flowers, as they have already started to fall.

Moving slowly yesterday - another sunny Saturday, proving it doesn't always rain here. Walked down to the water. I haven't spent much time walking the streets below my house. Making plans to do more of it. There are some great older houses that must have dotted the landscape around the same time the Bunkle was built. I took my camera but got shy about taking photos of them - it seemed sort of invasive so I failed that particular task really. I did find a string of three colourful old dames on one of the busy streets 10 or so blocks below where I live. Not the prettiest setting - no trees, which is unusual for the North Shore, but it is a main street - but a cheerful trio none the less. The little yellow place is from 1906 according to the sign.

My walk ended at the Quay market to buy some veggies. I sat by the water for a bit. New York it's not, but pretty it is.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

From the Big Apple to the Little Bunkle....

Ahhh yes. Back home after a whirlwind trip to NYC. Got in at 2 am (5am NY time...sigh) after a pretty good flight...except I couldn't really sleep on the plane. I had taken some Gravol, which gave me 'jumpy leg' so I was twitching like a jumping jack for most of the flight.

It was great to see New York again - the first time since the major skyline change of 2001. Maybe it's my imagination but the city seems...friendlier. This time people seemed to be going out of their way to be helpful - which wasn't my experience last time around. Maybe it was just the luck of the draw. Or maybe not.

It was a great chance to hang with my pal Lo who works in the TO office. We roll up to our hotel (the Vincci Avalon - and I should mention we never saw a body pillow - and i was looking forward to a body pillow...) at 32nd & Park, check in, go up to our 9th floor room, walk past the waft of weed coming out of a neighbour's room, and open our 'junior suite", which was at that time 77F. I turn on the "cooling" in the room, and two hours later we are up to 81F....which, give or take 1 degree, was what we were at for the next 3 days. The "cooler" was some sort of ceiling fan that chuffed air down in a close approximation of a dog panting. The windows were open 2 inches, but screws in the door frame meant that you couldn't open them more. The photo at left is the building across from us, taken between futile attempts to open the window. The staff made shocked and sympathetic faces about the heat in the room, made promises about getting maintenance to check into it, but as time went on we realized it was a lost cause. Things clarified at 7am the next morning, when we were woken by honking, airhorns and picketers - yes, the hotel staff union was on strike. Outside our window. Ahhhh, yes. New York. We did make a new friend at the hotel though - meet Manuel (or Luis or Jorge - his name changed alot), the reading lamp.

The conference we went to was OK - but of no blog interest so that's all I'll say. Spent most of the time walking, shopping, eating. Drooling over Kate Spade's flagship store and laughing at the cost of the Alexander McQueen bag I was admiring in Bloomingdales (US$1600? oooh these people live in SUCH a different world than mine). Realizing that I am not, in fact, "Forever 21" mentally or physically even if I would like to be, and cleaning out Anne Taylor instead. Watching our not-so-great waitress get berated at the Spice Market for not being on top of getting us our overpriced-for-the-experience meal. Eating a yummy apricot croissant at a tiny little french patisserie in Nolita. Watching the aging doyens of New York amble through the shops with their over the top jewelery and comfy Todds loafers. And sitting in the sunshine in Central Park.

Oh - we also visited our New York office, which is inside the Chrysler Building. Worth it just to see the woodwork and marble on the inside of that fantastic building - everything from the elevators to the bathrooms are incredible.

I do love New York. There is no other place like it, and the energy is remarkable and undeniable. And overwhelming. It is impossible not to start going at a faster pace, not to start getting more impatient - i felt like a human honking taxi half the time as I tried to navigate through the sidewalk crowds to walk right through that red "don't walk" hand at the corner (and those who know me well know how I Respect The Hand). I couldn't live there though. It is a great fantasy - oh how I would love to be the funky, cool, loft dwelling new york artist my misdirected imagination likes to believe I could be - but I need slow. I need quiet. And I'm glad to be home.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Back home...

Back home after a few days of work related fun (??) in Calgary. A place only an insane person would choose to live. Exhausted. One and a half days and I'll be off to New York. Hopefully less exhausted.
More next weekend, after the big apple.

Saturday, April 14, 2007

Sunny saturday...


One of these three things is a Thomas Haas double baked almond croissant (hint: it's not furry). I rue the day I found out about that place.

It may seem small to you....





Yes, there is big news at the Bunkle...THE BATHROOM DOOR HAS BEEN INSTALLED! My parents and brother came over yesterday and helped me hang it again - it has been down for almost a year now (yes, it is coming very close to my Bunkle anniversary date). Such a little step (and such a little door - it is very very narrow), but it feels like a very big accomplishment. The photo is a bit of a cheat - I haven't screwed in the door handle plates yet (plates and knob thanks to pals A&J), and I think I might swap out the door handle with another in my house so this one would be glass instead. You will also notice the distinct lack of trim on the right side of the door in the red room - one more finishing touch to do (I have all the trim painted in the basement, I just need to find the time and tools to cut it....)









I ripped the paper down this morning. I caught Maggie looking with some concern at the door from the bathroom side...she then wandered into the red room and stared some more. Hopefully she has now realized she cannot gallop through this one, like the cat-ripped version she is used to. As for Thomas, as soon as I took down the paper he put on his Gnarler hat and got straight to chewing at the paper and tape.

Funny how little steps like the door really make me happy. Happy isn't really the right word, satisfied is not quite it either really. But there is a little flash of joy. And as impatient as I sometimes get with the renos, each little step brings its reward...very pavlovian but very true. The Bunkle has sort of become a big craft project for me I think, and there is a certain amount of joy knowing it will never be completely over - houses never are. I may want to eat my words a week from now, but that is how I'm feeling at 7:55am on a Saturday morning.

And here's a little reminder of spring - the cherry tree in the front yard. I took this yesterday, when it was rainy out. It is sunny today, and the tree is looking even prettier.

Saturday, April 07, 2007

I've had a request...



...to move the sheep blog further down the list. Sheep too creepy I've been told. So here are a couple of snaps to fill the space...

Friday, April 06, 2007

Bunkle Easter...



...well, Good Friday at least. And the weather is great. Which has inspired me to start back to the Bunkle renos again. Last year I removed one of the three (count 'em) doors to my bathroom. It's a tiny door - maybe 22 inches wide. When I moved in, the door was covered in layer upon layer of paint which was cracking and cleaving and a few embedded stickers (yes, stickers) for good measure. It took 2 days to strip the paint with chemical stripper (day one with Mum's help). It was sort of interesting to go back in time through yellow, blue, grey, white layers. I thought - briefly - of not painting the door, and leaving the oak exposed. But then I thought through the implications (all 3 doors would need stripping...and what about the door trim, which certainly isn't oak!) and gave my head a shake. Anyway, today it made it's way back outside for some sanding and priming. The cats are going to be very sad to have it back - they really love bursting through the current ripped paper bathroom door -it makes a lot of noise, and Thomas usually stops and snorts
afterwards like he has accomplished some amazing physical feat - but really it isn't providing quite enough privacy when I have guests over ...



And here is another addition - a cushion so perfect it almost hurts to look at it. It's made by the very very talented Beth - who reads this blog sometimes, so thank you again Beth!! And thank you for taking me to see the elephant repairs and back to a world I still miss. Though maybe I should just think of the bunkle as one long conservation project (albeit without elephants - yet)...

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Some Sunday wishes...


First, Birthday Wishes, for my Dad, who is 71 today. Pretty much the whole crew came to the bunkle for birthday tea. I meant to take a picture of the banoffee birthday pie I made for the blog, but it got ravaged by my apparently sugar-starved family far too quickly. Here is the recipe though. Incredibly tasty and incredibly easy (and whoever wrote the recipe is also pretty funny - check out the Evil Chilli Butter Kitten recipe by the same guy ). Through this crazy brit's website I also found a link to a film I am really hoping makes it to release in north america ... oh the horror, the horror...

Speaking of films, watched Spike Lee's Inside Man last night - very good. And not just because Clive Owen is in it. Really.