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Archive for the ‘House’ Category

nightlight

Or ‘early-morning’ light, I should say.

These are the third and fourth night lights I’ve purchased in the past couple weeks.

I get up REALLY, REALLY, REALLY early to do school work or go to the gym, and after multiple mornings of stumbling around in the dark, tripping over cats, a dog, a water bowl (the cats actually move it from the bathroom all the way into the hallway, if you can believe that!), dog toys and Andrew’s tools (dangerous, I tell you), I decided it was time to fix the problem.

I started with one motion-sensing light outside our bedroom door, which is wonderful, except that inevitably the cats trip it just as we’re going to bed, so we have to wait 90 seconds for it to turn off.  But one wasn’t enough.  I picked up another one for downstairs that flicks on just as I’m halfway down the stairs each morning.

However, those two STILL weren’t enough.  Because of how our hallway is shaped, I’m in complete darkness as I make my way to the office each morning, but a motion light wouldn’t help because the sensor wouldn’t “see” me from around the corner.  Enter these “always on in the dark” lights–one for the upstairs hallway and one for downstairs near the kitchen.

Let there be light!

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It’s my day off of school and for once, I have nothing to do.  Nothing…  EXCEPT STAY HOME AND CLEAN!

WHOO-HOO!

Seriously, I’m almost shaking with excitement.  I’ve had so many things going on lately (school, interviews for the paper, grocery shopping, school, trying to work out…) that I haven’t had a chance to keep up with the regular day-to-day cleaning (and trust me, it shows).  Couple that with extra dust from a house project, clutter and the fact that I’m completely OCD about it all–and you’ve got one crazy girl who can’t take it anymore.

My Thursdays are usually full of errands and things (or 24 hours of painting!), that I can’t just CLEAN.

So, that is what I’m doing today.  And I’m making a loaf of garlic french bread in the breadmaker (what a life-saver that invention is!), and plan to make some zucchini bread if time permits as well.  Other time-permitting events include a trip to the post office (I will get Summer Rental back to you at some point, Emily!) and painting doors and trim in the guest room upstairs.  If I don’t get to them, oh well :)  There is always this weekend…

Speaking of this weekend–Andrew says I might be painting the laundry room, too!  FINALLY.  Cannot wait to post pictures of that!

I snapped a few photos to show you all the craziness/mess I’v been living with for the past few weeks…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Other tasks include:

-switching my Scentsy warmers to fall smells

 

-hanging our sheer curtains we just got in the mail

-paying our local school taxes

-moving houseplants from unheated porch to regular house

-wall repair/prep in the bedroom before touch-up painting

-a walk/visit to the Nyes with Hadrian?

I’m not sure I’ll be painting this afternoon…

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This post was originally supposed to just be about Mr. Nye’s birthday get-together (which was Sunday afternoon), but so much has happened since then!  Note: This post is in no way chronological.

(Edited to add:  Yet again, I’ve delayed a day…  It’s now Saturday morning and mom arrived last night to visit.  We already made a Bed, Bath and Beyond run for a couple small items–blast!  Andrew took my coupons in the Pilot on his trip to Ohio this weekend–and are planning lots of house-y things today.  We’ve already reorganized my small kitchen appliances and it’s not even 10 a.m.)

And speaking of the Nye’s…  I took Hadrian on his first walk in the village yesterday–I can’t believe it’s taken almost a week–to their house to stop by their yard sale.  I walked away with a well-loved cookbook of  Mrs. Nye’s in which she marked some muffin recipes.  Those are always the best kind to have–the marked-up and splattered ones.

Getting him in the shot was surprisingly difficult…

This…

…and this is what you see when you round the park (which is across the street) on your way to the Nyes’ house.

What a beautiful view!  I started off in a sweatshirt (can you believe you can wear sweats and pants here in summer?!  I LOVE IT.)

In other news, we put our bed together.  (I use “we” loosely here; I mostly watched.)  And in true pet-fashion, Hadrian had to be in the middle of everything.  We had to force him out of the bed so Andrew could finish putting the slats in!

Check out this pint glass.  I LOVE pint glasses with fun logos and things, except that I need to curb my habit of ‘collecting’ things I love; my mug, glass, scarf and Le Creuset collections are getting dangerously large…

Anyway, I bought two of these at Hallmark (I much rather would have liked to have found them at some neat store or Goodwill or something, but oh well, Hallmark does have cute stuff) LAST SUMMER almost as soon as we moved into the hotel.  I couldn’t bear to break them out until we were in our “forever home,” so they’ve been living in a paper bag shoved in a bin ever since.

I busted them out the other night as we ate leftover pizza and celebrated getting both the extra fridge and freezer into the basement.  (There I go again with this “we” business; I had no part in that victory.  Andrew, his dad, and a couple other engineer friends from Moog graciously helped move our appliances this past week.)  And a victory it was!  They had to take the doors off both of them, plus the basement door AND doorframe, and even get a special tool.  But I’m happy with them in the basement, which is all that matters :)

Now, onto the party!!

We’ve been ‘adopted’ by the Nyes, especially since Alex had to go and move to Pittsburgh, just as we moved back to EA.  We find ourselves over there once every week or two–invited or not–and Mrs. Nye force-feeds us homemade cookies and Kone King ice cream she keeps stocked in the freezer.  We have it rough, I know.

So, when we heard Alex would be in town for his dad’s birthday and that his little get-together would be Sunday afternoon–as in, the Sunday we were in the middle of moving–there was no question we’d be taking a break to attend.  These celebrations are always ‘intimate’ affairs–late lunches in which family (immediate, cousins and grandma) and Andrew and I–crowd into the eat-in kitchen.  This time we feasted on steak, pork, potatoes, green beans, rolls and fruit.

I know posting this picture of Andrew is dangerous–what with the Nye boys being loyal readers and all–but I had to.  Let’s just hope it doesn’t end up on a blanket!

We sang and Mr. Nye blew out his candles before we enjoyed some of the best chocolate cake (or should I say best icing) I’ve had in awhile.  Mrs. Nye, I’m (almost) ashamed to admit that I single-handedly ate all the leftover cake you sent home with us…in one sitting.  Do you have more?  I might need some soon.

And the event wouldn’t be complete without one of Adam’s ‘Andrew creations.’  This time, Andrew’s blanket presided over us, hanging from an upper window, akin to a poster of Kim Jong Ill or something.

 

You just never know what you’re gonna get with Adam.  You just never know.

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…do as the Buffaloes do.  Or, Buffalonians, rather.

And that would be to eat wings, of course.

It was a beautiful 81 degree day here yesterday and after a balmy walk with the dog, Mom, Josh and I met Andrew for lunch at the Bar Bill, a local watering hole and wing favorite.  It gets pretty packed on weekend evenings (hey, it’s a small place), but summer lunches under the awning are just great.

Mom and I shared a beef on weck sandwich and we all enjoyed some of their wings.  Josh is even more of a wuss than me when it comes to spice; I think he let a wing touch his lips and then announced he couldn’t go any further.  (I will admit, my spice tolerance has gone WAY up since moving here–now I don’t have to ask the servers at Thai places to make my dishes milder–due to my wing consumption.  I sure hope that’s the ONLY thing that’s gone up…)

After licking our fingers, I showed mom and Josh our new house–the owners were nice enough to let us come for a visit.  I even did a little recon–finding out exact paint colors and eyeing sizes of things and such–and they’re even going to leave a couple pieces of furniture I’d had my eye on AND those cool house numbers Andrew and I had admired!  SCORE (and what a blessing)!  They are just the nicest people alive :)

We spent the afternoon in EA, walking the village.  Mom popped into Vidler’s and was even able to find a couple things she needed (a single zipper pull, anyone?), as well as some things she “didn’t” (a pair of Birkenstocks from the place Andrew used to go as a kid).  After refueling with some drinks from Taste, we headed home to await Andrew’s arrival after work.

We went back into the village a bit later to drop Andrew at a co-op meeting and I drove mom and Josh around a little to show them the high school and a little more of the village.  After a quick visit at the Nye’s house, we popped into Fowler’s to see Abigail and so I could stock up on some chocolate (mostly as gifts, really) with my Groupon, before catching the 9 p.m. showing of the new Spiderman movie at the Aurora Theater.  Andrew Garfield makes a great Spiderman–go check it out!

On the agenda today: Niagara Falls and Pasquale’s Pizza…what else?

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Mom and Josh are here visiting!

(So happy to have them here, but I swear!  I can’t catch a break this summer…it’s just one crazy day after another!  When am I supposed to have that ‘down time’ I’ve been waiting for?)

We picked them up at the airport at 9:30 and went straight to church, where we heard Jim and Jill Kelly talk about her new book and their struggles and faith–very neat to see them and loved hearing their testimonies.

Then we headed to Elmwood to get some Saigon Cafe Thai for lunch before walking around and popping into different shops.  Scored a major find at reimagine, a trendy consignment home-goods place–some small retro Pyrex/Corning saucers that match the teal-rimmed ones I found at Goodwill in Ohio!  We also started eyeing this amazing black-and-wood two-tone long table for our new house…

We (well, more like Josh and I) wanted some ice cream and after seeing the wait at Watson’s, Andrew announced that he was taking us to Condrell’s, a local long-established ice cream and chocolate shop.  We enjoyed sundaes and sodas before heading home to rescue the puppy (who’d been cooped up for 7 hours–thank you to Mom and Dad Layer for giving him a comfort break once during that time!) and start marinating dinner.

After a walk and a quick female-only trip to Target, we all settled in to watch This Means War (cute, but super predictable and a bit more risque than I anticipated), before turning in after midnight…

Andrew’s already off to work, I’ve been up since 5:30 working on an article and doing my morning thing, and our two visitors are still asleep!  Although Josh did open his eyes and speak coherently for a bit while I was up putzing in the kitchen.

We’re off to the gym later this morning, then meeting Andrew for lunch at the Bar Bill for wings, then seeing our new house (!), followed by an afternoon in East Aurora.  Sigh…I’m happy.

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we bought a zoo

Not really.

But we did buy a house!

For real.  And it’s amazing.  As in, God-totally-had-this-one-picked-out-a-year-ago-which-is-why-we-lost-the-other-two-and-why-we-haven’t-settled-for-anything-else-and-now-it’s-all-worth-it.

Whew.  That was a long one.

Well, here it is:

It’s completely charming and everything–no, more–than we’d prayed for.  It basically our dream house in the village, minus the 10 acres Andrew thinks he wants and the white cabinets I’ve always wanted.  Oh well, small price to pay!

It’s located smack-dab in the middle of the village, which means its walkable to EVERYTHING–both the cutesy “historic” north part of Main Street, as well as other things a little further south, like Charlie’s Diner and even Pasquale’s.  It’s just down the street from the Roycroft Campus and across the street from Hamlin Park.  When we left the home inspection yesterday, we could hear field day going on and see kiddos in brightly colored t-shirts running around.  Our hearts swelled.

It has a relatively large, private yard (giant by village standards), comes with a small deck, flagstone patio and hot tub.  It also has a two-car garage, but because we both have really large vehicles, one of our first projects will be moving some of the support beams (it has a second story storage loft) to make sure we can get them both in there before winter.

Before I get too far, I have to tell the story of how we came to find this house.  Actually, we didn’t find it at all.  It’s really a miracle, and I just can’t even stress that enough.  I know I speak for both of us when I say that we are feeling incredibly humbled and blessed beyond words.  God truly had this one for us and has orchestrated the process every step of the way.

In fact, the house wasn’t even on the market yet.  The current owners (who are AWESOME by the way–I feel like we could be friends!) found out they needed to move and decided to ‘test the waters’ by putting out one of those little plastic boxes with brochures with info and a couple exterior photos.  No ‘For Sale’ sign or anything.

Andrew’s dad happened to walk by on his way to the gym one night and grabbed a flyer for us.  But we didn’t even know what to do next; do we call our realtor or not?  Long story short: our realtor graciously offered to step aside and let us handle this on our own with the owners, we arranged a time to see the place and then waited.  Not anxiously at all; I didn’t have a chance to get excited since I hadn’t even seen any interior photos.  Seeing (and then falling in love with) this house has been the most peaceful experience yet.

That same afternoon, we called the owners back and chatted with them on the couch and basically told them we’d be buying the house straight-up; in fact, I even quipped, “Now, no more opening of doors or answering of the phone!”  Little did I know that that little statement sealed the deal for us, according to what the owner said yesterday.

Two days later we had a signed contract and the house passed the home inspection yesterday with flying colors!  Which, for being a 1926 build, is no small task…

Anyway, back to the tour:

(Can you tell I’m excited?  I’ve been waiting more than a year to do this…)

Here’s the enclosed porch, which is also the main entrance to the house.  A porch, either open or with windows, is something we both really wanted, since they are so ubiquitous to the village.  The owners have wicker furniture out there now, but I think we’d like to turn it into more of an entrance with a place for coats and shoes, as well as some seating.  I mean, with a view like that, you can’t NOT sit out there with a book and coffee or tea or something!

Check out all that light!  Finally, I’ll be able to take decent food photos!  Also, the interior is painted the same color as the outside of the house.  The house will need to painted (or sided) within the next year or so, so we’ll have to make a call on whether we want to paint it a different color or something.  Andrew loves a really dark gray and I’ve always loved slate blue (both with black shutters), but the sage green the house is right now is very nice as well.  I suppose when we finally do side the house with the ‘wood-look’ vinyl siding, we’ll really have to make a decision.

After you come in from the porch, you enter an L-shaped room to your left and the entrances to the kitchen and dining room are on the right.  They have a giant piano directly in front of the entrance, as well as another dining table and a sitting area in front of the wood-burning fire place.

From the fire place looking toward the front of the house/porch:

We don’t have ANY furniture for these areas yet, so we’ll have to figure that out shortly after moving in.  I don’t want to fill it with furniture, but I also don’t want it to sit empty for months, either!  We both want leather couches next, although I’d like the leather to be what we use on a daily basis, since that’s where the animals will congregate.  Leather = less hair sticking all over the place!

Here is a glass door between the formal seating area around the fire place and the back entrance off the deck:

The entry is painted a really neat avocado green that I think I’m going to keep, at least for awhile.  I love color (as do the owners), but one thing I learned in the Ohio house was that I wanted to keep the colors a little more muted and in the same family and tone.  I think I just had too many bright colors going on in that house.

This is what you see when you enter from the back deck.  The formal sitting room to your right, basement door and stairs in front, a half bath on the left and the opening to the family room and kitchen on the left as well.  There is a built-in coat closet immediately to the left as you walk in.

Here’s what you see if you stop in the hall and look into the family room.  Again, I love their colors!  I love the gray on the wall, and check out the pieces above the TV: not sure if you can see them well or not, but they are “2,” “0,” “5,” which is the number of the house!  LOVE THAT.  I must find out where they got them.

That white door you see on the right is the laundry–FIRST-FLOOR laundry.  Seriously, you should have seen some of the basements we’ve seen…and most of them still have the laundry down there.  Ick!

My favorite is the bank of windows to the back yard.  I can’t get enough natural light.

See that white piece of furniture under the clock?  They’re letting us keep it!  LOVE IT!  Andrew loves giant clocks, too, so we’ll have to go find one as well.  I’m thinking maybe a good place for one (not that right there is a bad spot) would be at the top of the stairs?

Back to the hallway…here is the half-bath:

It’s a grayish-purple and a very earthy tone and is really growing on me.  It goes so well with the green in the hallway.  Andrew really wanted a half-bath on the main floor, so I’m glad this house has one.  Most of these older ones do have a bath on the main floor, but it’s usually been turned into a full bath (so it’s cramped) and is the second bath of the house, which means there is still only one full bath on the second floor.

And….the BRAND-NEW KITCHEN!

The owners did this shortly after they moved in about three years ago, and didn’t anticipate moving, so I’m sad to see them not enjoying their new kitchen.  I really am.  As much as I love this house, I truly wish they didn’t have to move.

It has cherry cabinets (my dream is white, so we’ll see what happens down the road, but for now, I’m thrilled) and they’re nice.  Like, really nice.  Granite countertop.  Stainless steel appliances.  Built-in microwave (I hate countertop microwaves–the less clutter the better), gas range (finally!!) and an awesome French-door, bottom freezer fridge!

There is even a small pantry in the kitchen, which is something you rarely find in these old homes.  In fact, the one we’re renting doesn’t have one, so I had to take a small bookcase and drag it into the room next to the kitchen for a place to keep food.

Off the kitchen is the dining room:

I LOVE the white plate rail on the walls, the white trim, the beautiful floors and all the natural light.  I’m thinking we’ll eventually paint it something in the blue/green/teal earth-tone family, and we’ll need to get some sort of black hutch in order to store table linens and all my cookbooks.

Check out this window!  LOVE IT.

Here’s the laundry area, off the family room:

A little cramped, but we’re thinking of trying to relocate the hook-up to the wall with the door (we’d get rid of the door) to create a bit more space.  I have those large units with the pedestals, which might make the space seem even more cramped.  Me + cramped space = claustrophobia.

Beautiful, unique staircase!  I love that it’s to the side of the front entrance and that it kind of breaks that front L-shaped room up a bit.

Here’s the hall upstairs if you take a right where the staircase forks:

I love the built-in linen closets and drawers!  A lot of these old homes have them; they are something I’d never seen before we started looking at homes here last year.

Bedroom #1:

Guest bath:

It’s painted a light brown and has light green accents, which I really like.  It has a window (yes! natural light!) near the shower, so I think I’d like to go with a really light or sheer curtain to let as much light in as possible.  The wood floor has even been stained a darker brown than the hallway, which I think is a neat touch as well.

Bedroom #2:

Here’s more of bedroom 2, but it’s really more of an office.  It’s L-shaped and small, but would fit a twin bed no problem.  I think we’ll make it an office, too, for now.

Here’s bedroom #3:

Check out the wall of built-in closets!  These might be my favorite thing in the house, mostly because they are just so unique and different and classy.  They look kind of like shutters, and they slide.

I also like the light green on the walls in here and see this as a baby’s room one day, but until then, maybe a place to put a craft table and an ironing board?  Here’s my dilemma:  The room is too beautiful to NOT use at all, and while it would make a beautiful guest room, I would hate to go to all the trouble of setting it up that way and then in a year or two (or whenever), having to turn it into a baby’s room.  And it’s giant, which means it could hold TWO kiddos at some point, which is more proof that it should be, one day, a baby’s room.

Here’s the hall looking the other way, and you can just see the top of the right fork of the stairs on the left.

If you were to take a left at the fork in the road stairs, you would see this:

HOLY COW!  Can I just say that perhaps the weirdest/neatest thing about this house is that the color that is on the walls in this bedroom is the EXACT color I was going to paint it?!  Our bedroom in Ohio was more sky blue than this, and I had already decided I wanted a more slate blue the next time around.  God, you are too funny.

It’s currently carpeted, although I’m sure one day soon we’ll do wood.  Andrew would like to find some reclaimed room and have it refinished/stained to match the rest of the upstairs.  We’ll also need to add a ceiling fan, which will be a bit of a project for Andrew since there isn’t currently a light there.

And get this–a walk-in closet!

It’s giant, and I’ve already informed Andrew that if he can’t keep his stuff neat and tidy, he’ll be asked to use another closet.  Orderly, color-coordinated closets make me happy.

And the icing on the cake:

A beautiful master bath with TWO sinks (essential!), a Jacuzzi tub, stand-up shower and WINDOWS that’s already painted light blue!  Seriously.  I feel like I’m in a dream.  Don’t wake me, I like it here.

The floor is made of those little white hexagonal “subway” tiles (I think that’s what they call them) and I love it.  So classic.  LOVE the wainscoting on the walls, too.  I also love the floor-t0-ceiling tiles in the shower, too.  At some point, I’d like a clear shower door; I realize it’s less private, but I think it just looks sharp.

And last but not least, the basement:

You wouldn’t think it would be that big of a deal, but it so is.  First of all, we’ve seen houses as old as 1870; you can imagine the basements in those babies!  Seriously, some of the ones we’ve seen can’t even be used as storage.  Think sitting water, musty smells, caving-in cement walls and dirt floors.

So, this one is fantastic compared to those!  It has plenty of storage and is dry.

It even has a partially-finished workout area!

And, oh by the way, they want to leave their work out equipment!  I almost fell off my chair when they said that!  I have no problem getting to the gym, but it would be so nice to have something at home for those days when we might get snowed in or something, or maybe so I could do weights after a run outside.  What a blessing!

So, as you can see, God has just blessed our socks off and Andrew and I still feel like it’s not even real.  Except it is, since I dropped the second part of our “good faith” deposit off today…

We tentatively close August 15 and can barely contain ourselves.  I’ve already started my “to buy” list for the house…

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(At least for the next two weeks before my online class starts…)

I’m taking it slow today; just trying to relax and enjoy tackling my GIANT to-do list (you know, the one with all the things I’ve put-off for the last two weeks…) piece-by-piece.  Up first: BLOGGING!

So, yesterday was the big day; my Chem 2 final.  I think I was more nervous for this one (despite my insane amount of studying) because I remembered how hard the Chem 1 final had been.  Plus, everyone in my class knew I’d done exceptionally well on the first one, so I felt all this unnecessary pressure to do just as well the second time around.  Only time will tell; I get my grade Thursday.

All in all, the test went well.  A bunch of us showed up early for a study session with the tutor–which really just turned into a pseudo-party with donuts that probably served as more of a stress-reliever than anything else.  I wish I could say that I walked out of the test a few minutes early knowing I’d done my absolute best and been able to feel incredible relief; instead I took every last moment and even then didn’t have a chance to go back and give the ones I’d had questions on a second look.  The ACS finals are just like that; you just never know how you did until you get your grade.  I’m not worried; the truth is that I studied hard, I’m a good student, I went into the exam with a 101% average in the class and the final is highly curved–if I don’t get an A, no one will.  What I’m really interested in is my raw score on the final…

I did, however, take one last look at ECC before I left–all finished there!

Abigail and I had a late lunch at Arriba, where I enjoyed a small margarita on the rocks with salt (my absolute favorite) and just relaxed outside enjoying the mild weather.  She just returned from a whirlwind week in Florida with her campus Christian fellowship from Penn State, so she was just as bushed as me.  It was so nice to be able to (finally!) be able to enjoy talking about summer plans, Carolyn’s shower details and birthdays coming up (our summer is full of them).

Afterward, we got our nails done :)  (Because that’s what girls do, of course, and that’s what THIS GIRL does to reward herself after a semester well-done.)

This is the color I fell in love with at J. Crew a few weeks ago, but hadn’t had time to actually paint on my nails.  It’s even brighter than this in person…  What can I say?  I wanted to CELEBRATE.

Abigail and I decided some iced coffee and Main Street-walking was in order after our nails were finished, so we ended our afternoon doing that. Oh, and trying on the HOT PINK HEELS Carolyn picked out for us for her wedding.  Oh, they are bright.  Oh, what an excuse to buy something I would NEVER buy myself in a million years.  :)  I just told Andrew he’s going to have to take me places one can wear hot pink heels (with black pants, perhaps) so I can get some use out of them.  Rick’s, I think?

Speaking of Rick’s…  We were supposed to go there to celebrate the end of my semester, but it was a bit overcast.  We love nothing more than sitting on their patio, every table full, on a beautiful night enjoying good food, good wine and good weather, and (unfortunately) it was just not that kind of night around here.  So, we opted for The King and I, a thai place a bit north of Buffalo.

Love this outfit, and LOVE those shoes :)  I wore them for my exam.

After starting with hot tea (for him), white wine (for me) and an order of spring rolls (Andrew’s absolute favorite), our dinners arrived.

Instead of pad thai, my normal dish, I ordered their house noodles, which was similar but with more crushed peanuts, less tamarind and more veggies.  YUM.

Andrew got a spicy stir-fry and gobbled it right up!

Don’t you love his shirt?  He knew I would.  It was a recent J.Crew purchase on super sale-$27.99!  LOVE IT.  He has these awesome light linen pants he’s always pairing with heavy or dark shirts/shoes/jacket, so this shirt will help give him something light and season-appropriate to wear with them.

We were both craving a little vanilla ice cream action, and Dairy Queen is Andrew’s favorite.  (I’m a Kone King kind of girl, myself, but DQ is good, too.  And it was way more convenient.)

Can you tell which one was mine?  Despite my outright OBSESSION with ice cream, I was a good girl and ordered a small, which was just right.  However, I’m already salivating over my next DQ treat: the ‘confetti cake’ blizzard they’re featuring this month.  A mini-version will definitely find its way into my mouth when Abigail and I go to the mall to run errands later this week…

I have LOTS to do today…  Up next: clean the house!  Between all the freshly mowed grass we’ve tracked in (grrr…), hair, dust and other things that have been ignored for the past couple days, it’s a MESS!

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This is our neighborhood.  I walked (HA!  WALKED!) to the hardware store to buy a lightbulb shortly after moving into our rental house in October and snapped a few photos along the way.  (Somehow, they never actually got published…  Life happens, I guess.)

This is the top of our neighborhood where the road meets up with Quaker (a.k.a. 20A) which is the road that takes you to East Aurora.  It extends east that way (the way you’re looking, above) and west through Orchard Park and further past the Bills stadium and, eventually, turns into Southwestern Blvd., which is a main thoroughfare here and also the street on which the Y resides.

Here is this adorable little gift shop on Quaker called the Lemon Tree.  I finally went in once when Emily was visiting and it’s definitely your typical gift shop with kitchen items, kitschy items, papers, baby stuff, etc…

And this even more adorable children’s bookstore called “B is for Books.”  The name is interesting, though, since I came to find out through writing an article for the paper that the owner’s last name actually starts with a ‘B,’ so I thought that was neat.  It’s the kind of place I can envision myself going once we have kids, although by that time I’m hoping we’re settled in East Aurora!  There is a used bookstore in EA, as well as the library on Main Street, so those will have to do.

Here’s a shot from the intersection of Quaker and Buffalo Roads, the main intersection of Orchard Park.  I love the lampposts–they’re the kind that play music, too.

Here’s the hardware store, around since 1907.  It’s no Lowe’s, but it has the necessities and is way closer (and walkable!), which I love.  And I love shopping locally.  I think it’s becoming more and more important these days to do that.  I’m not saying I’m ready to swear-off my Honda Pilot or other foreign-made goods (I’m all for good, old-fashioned capitalism), but when all things are equal, I’d rather support the local economy and reduce my carbon footprint.

And we’re back!  Here is our actual street and our house is about two past the stop sign on the right.  It’s a cute little street filled with cute houses and youngsters.  Ours, as a rental, leaves a bit to be desired in the curb-appeal category, but it gets the job done.

Now, imagine all this under a blanket of white.  That what happened yesterday just before class, and by the afternoon, it was all gone again.  I’m thinking my snow boots are going to get a run for their money this winter…

 

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I had some computering to do this afternoon (blogs, article-writing, etc…), and we’re having a bit of a heat wave here (it’s 50 out!), so I packed up my bookbag and took to the road.  My destination?  Panera and their free wi-fi.

I’ve been a busy girl these past couple days (which is why there has been a conspicuous lack of blogging despite still being on break).  After all our traveling, it’s been a constant stream of laundry, cleaning and dog taking-care-of.  I’m sorry, but I have come to the conclusion that anyone who owns a home and values cleanliness never has a ‘break.’ What I will do when children come, I know not.

Speaking of children…  I gave Hadrian a bath today.  Whew!  Is there an entry for THAT in my calorie counter?  Seriously.  And the bath is the easy part.  It’s the subsequent cleaning of the shower and bathroom floor, followed by washing all the towels I used that really makes it a dreaded event.  And I wash his beds.  And the multiple brushing sessions to attempt to de-hair him as much as possible before jumping in the tub.  So yeah, the bath is the easy part.  Even with a Great Dane in an extra-small tub.  Next time, I’ll snap a picture.

This is one of the main roads near where we live.  It’s part of my 3.5 mile loop and also how I get to the gym in the mornings.  Ahead of me is my destination and more civilization; behind me is the intersection with Quaker Road, which is the road I take to get to East Aurora.

I’m here!  Half-caff, half Hazelnut coffee and writing await me :)

And for completeness, here is a shot of the other side of the shopping center.

For as much as I’ve been here, I’ve never set foot into another store here.  We have a Chico’s, a Black House White Market, Francesca’s and Talbots, as well as Jos. A. Banks and a LOFT.  It’s probably just as well; the last thing anyone needs to be doing in January is spending more money.  (Note to Andrew:  EXCEPT for my boots and that awesome dress from the J. Crew catalog…;))

BTW, be sure to check out my latest post for the co-op: my best recipes of 2011!

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1.  Long time no type.  Buried in schoolwork and life.  Not necessarily in that order.  Attempting to force myself to come up for air.

2.  Chemistry is hard.  Like, fail-out-of-class hard.  (Not me, but you know what I mean.)  I knew there was a good reason to fear it back at Penn State!  Anyway, I’m doing alright, but a recent bombed quiz has shown me I need to devote more time to Chem and less to Anatomy.

3.  In all my busy-ness today, I decided I needed to make bread.  That’s so like me.  Why?  I had to “revive” my starter that’s in the fridge.  And have I forgotten about the GAJILLION things of bread we brought home from our Thanksgiving trip?  (No fewer than 1.5 loaves of rye bread, 10 bagels, 8 onion rolls, plus crackers.)  Our house is carb central!

4.  My Thanksgiving pumpkin pie was the ugliest thing ever (thanks to my impatience with store-bought crust), but tasted great.  Get the recipe here.

5.  Speaking of recipes–I just managed another blog post for the co-op.  It’s about cranberries and I included the cranberry brisket Andrew loves so much.  Read it here.

6.  I am now “officially” a New Yorker; I took care of getting a new license and registering the car.  License should be here in about a week!  It’s kind of exciting, in a really anti-climactic sort of way.  I think if we’d moved into a house we were excited about, everything would feel different.  Instead, everything still feels very temporary.  But, nonetheless, it’s still neat to see the Pilot with its new yellow and blue license plate.

7.  We named our plants.  Well, I named our plants.  Andrew just went along with it good-naturedly.  My dear friend, Emily, inspired me.  She has such beautiful, healthy, vibrant house plants.  I am so jealous.  She and I recently traded some plant clippings and she mentioned one of them was named ‘Stella.’  Now, I’ve heard of people naming their plants before, but I just never have.  I mean, mine don’t normally last that long…it was never a good idea to get attached.  However, I do have one that has lasted FOUR years now!  Andrew and I were in disbelief when we realized it.  So, on the way home from our Thanksgiving holiday, I used my phone to look up names and their meanings (again, such a ‘me’ thing to do–we’re talking the significance of the names of HOUSE PLANTS) and we decided to call the big, four-year-old one “Gerard” which means ‘hardy.’  (We’ve been calling it ‘hardy’ since I hadn’t killed it yet, so we figured why not?).  I have one other plant, an orchid Andrew bravely got me for Valentine’s Day this year.  (I don’t know what he was thinking.)  Anyway, it did alright for awhile, then the blooms fell off, then I panicked until I found out that was normal, and just when it was growing another stem and bloom, one of the movers bumped into it on our table and broke it off!  I was heartbroken.  I looked up ‘long-suffering’ and ended up with “Patience.”  She’s been through a lot, that one, and just the other day I noticed a tiny bud getting ready to sprout from the moss–hurray!  And now, I have Emily’s purple one to re-pot, who I have been calling “Stella 2.”  Between the animals and now anthropomorphic plants, we have one full house!

8. I’m supposed to be working on psychology homework.  Must hurry!

9.  Hadrian has been down for the count all day today–GLORIOUS!  I’ve been so productive.  (In case you’re wondering, any time he returns from ‘puppy camp’ he sleeps 24/7 for about two days.  Totally normal.)

10.  We have 7 pints of ice cream in our freezer, plus the remnants of two Jeni’s that Emily and Dan brought us, plus a tiny bit of homemade Jeni’s vanilla.  SEVEN unopened Graeter’s and Jeni’s pints.  That’s like $45 in ice cream (hey, don’t judge my expensive taste in ice cream!).  My brilliant plan: tiny scoops, both to make it last and keep it off my hips.  I’ll let you know how it goes, but I’m not terribly optimistic…

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