Food cellar

January 18, 2026

I started the day removing some slats that made up a base for some old basement shelves. I figure maybe 80 years old.

I heard the prior owners, Bill and Neva, had a victory garden. These shelves appear to be for canned goods and whatever else. Bill and Neva lived here for 50 years. I believe before that it was Neva’s parents, who bought from the builder. We’ve been in this house since 1993, about 35 years. And the house turns 100 this year.

Homemade Shelves – Bottom Slats Removed

But the bottom shelf slats on the concrete floor were very wet during the flood and the stuff on them was ruined. I’m not trusting their dry out, and removed them.

Slats Removed

I now have to decide whether these can go in yard waste or garbage. I’m not sure they are really raw wood, so leaning to garbage.

The empty shelves are where Christmas stuff is stored. It’s still upstairs, but I think I’m safe to move it back as long as it’s not on the floor. The floor slat level used to have Halloween stuff in boxes. All of that left with the junk hauler. I think this will be the new home for our Christmas Tree stand. It’s heavy and should be on the ground, not on a closet shelf above head height where it used to be stored.

And, unlike my thoughts this morning, we did take a long walk this afternoon.

Daffodils in January

Walking Up and Down

January 17, 2026

Our biggest activity today was a long walk. We essentially went north, and then south to go home. North is uphill and south is downhill.

There were a few motives for this walk. Getting some furniture slides for the newest, yet to be built shelving units, from Maple Leaf Ace Hardware, and seeing if the Mountain was visible from the Maple Leaf reservoir. We were successful on both counts.

The Mountain is Out

The route was  2-1/2 miles each way. There is a Macrina bakery very near the turnaround. Since it had been uphill to get there, we felt we deserved a treat. Yum.

Over 12,000 steps for the day, but not much else was accomplished. Watching both futbol and football, and working on a jigsaw puzzle. Bit of a lazy day.

Pruning

January 16, 2026

It was sort of nice outside today. So I decided it was time to prune the raspberry patch.

I am not all confident that we will have a crop this summer. Probably some, but not a lot. I wonder if I can plant some new canes now, for the future. And the plants that are growing are confused.

Raspberry on the plant in January

There were only a few fruiting, but I just don’t know.

On the house plant side, this amarylys is blooming. It is doing pretty well. I have a history of killing plants, not intentionally. I always feel guilty. My mother was the exact opposite. She loved plants, spent hours working with them, volunteered at the botanical gardens, and had a greenhouse included with the house my parents built.

Ignore the background. I couldn’t figure out how to blur.

Working towards the future, we bought two more shelving units. Not quite as wide as the first two, to fit into spaces where a wider shelf wouldn’t work.

Part of me feels we need the shelves for better organization. Another part of me says having more will make it easier to retain things we don’t really need.

More Doing

January 15, 2026

Today started with sleeping in. I had a hard time falling asleep. And the rest of the day I kept saying, “It’s X o’clock already?”

The first order of the day was a trip to Costco. It had been since before Christmas, and maybe Thanksgiving when we last graced the establishment. Part of our Costco runs includes food bank donations, so the second order was a stop at the food bank.

And then it was lunch, already.

In the afternoon I finally made it back to the basement, or more specifically, the garage.

Rearranging a lot of stuff at first, swept and vacuumed, and then built the second set of shelves.

Garage with new shelves

The second set of brown shelves is a set we have had for some time. It lived in the kitchen for several years. Then it was relegated to the basement, where it was subjected to our recent flood. The darkness on the bottom shelf shows how much the particle-board soaked up. It is dry now. .

My first use for these sets of shelves is to collect stuff that we want to get rid of. And then get rid of it through a free garage sale. And whatever doesn’t “sell” will be taken to wherever that’s not our house. The particle board shelves will be departing is amoung the pieces free to any interested party.

The tools on the wall to the right, are not leaving. There is still much to clean and go through in the basement, and finding a home for all, at least temporarily, will be a challenge.

I’m pretty sure there’s at least one more set of shelves in our near future.

Pennies

January 14, 2026

As noted in an earlier post we take walks and Carl keeps his eyes peeled for coins. This afternoon we set out yet again.  A 10,000 step walk in the end although that was not a goal when we started.

Carl spotted 7 coins, all pennies. 

One required a repeat visit to an intersection because it was too busy when it was first spotted. It was just as busy on the return trip, but there was a swoop during the crosswalk passage planned, and it went off flawlessly.

The 7 pennies

“One of these things is not like the others.”

Can you spot the oddball?

One is a wheatback.

Wheatback, if you look closely

Wheatbacks are relatively rare nowadays. Produced from 1909 to 1958.

Wheatback front side

The date on this particular penny is 1943, which means it’s a Steel Penny. They changed to steel in 1943, with only dated 1944, because they needed the copper for the war effort.

The Lincoln Memorial was added to the backside of the coin in 1959, on the 50th anniversary of the Lincoln penny.

This is all to avoid talking about work in the basement, that just didn’t happen today

Day of Get it Done

January 13, 2026

I had ideas of what I wanted to get done yesterday, and that didn’t happen. So today I tried again.

First up, moving forward with getting some new shelves built, to be able to store things off the floor. As with most of my projects, there are at least 3 steps that have to happen before the identified task can happen.

In this case the box with the shelves to be was in the garage. I decided to try to clear a path to the basement door, so I would be less likely to trip over whatever.

The garage, shelving in boxes.

The primary concerns for tripping were leftover vinyl siding pieces. These are light but long. The beach chair setup was done to get long pieces off of the wet floor following the flood. The pieces are so long that they only fit against the west wall (right side of the picture). I started to move the siding and then noticed how dirty the floor was. Cue sweeping and then vacuuming. Carl assisted with the final siding move, because they are so long. I’m not really happy with just having them sit on the floor again, but need to not distract myself too much.

Finally able to open the box and start extracting shelf parts. The total weight of the box is just over 100 lbs, so moving pieces was easier.

The actual shelf directions were pretty easy. A second set of hands to hold pieces in place was helpful. While the theory of construction was easy, there was one connector piece that was slightly bent, so it wouldn’t slide into the shelving leg.

Aaaargh.

Luckily, a little leverage with a screwdriver head allowed us to make the piece usable.

New basement shelves

In the end, shelving unit 1 was completed. For this location we are using a lower, 2-wide, essentially two shelving units setup. The second set may be the taller 5 shelf setup.

All done before noon.

After lunch we embarked on a long walk. About 10,000 steps.

And then cooking for future meals. A few steaks into a marinade for tomorrow. And then made lentil chili for later this week.

Eat the rainbow

And I’m ready for bed.

Watch out for mice

January 12, 2026

I spent much time at the work station pictured above today. This had not been my intention upon waking. I was more dressed for basement work, including putting on my steel-toed boots. These were boots I had for work work, and they’re comfortable. If I’m planning to be lifting or carrying things with weight, I figure it may save a toe.

While at the work station I am not sure why I would need to worry about my feet, maybe drop a mouse or something.

With my feet protected, I focused on learning more about how to track Medicare costs and coverage. Since joining Medicare we have had multiple doctor appointments, but have yet to get a bill. And I don’t think it’s because the coverage is so great, but that we don’t quite understand the path of payment request progression.

We had another appointment today, and I was trying to catch up on tracking. To track it is necessary to know more than just, there was another appointment.

After some sleuthing, I found the records showing costs for the visits, and initial coverage, but most still say pending, so no final $$, yet. And still no bills.

And today’s appointment begat at least two more. Fun, fun, fun.

Back to the basement tomorrow…

Back to the basement

January 11, 2026

I finally got re-started on the recovery work, after a few days off. Cmpleting cleaning the north end of the basement was the goal today. Goal basically accomplished.

This end of the basement used to be a room. Bedroom sized, and we used it as an extra bedroom occasionally. The most frequent occupant was Dennis. He would stay with us for a few weeks at a time, or a summer, or whatever was needed. We were his address in Washington. Dennis was a film archivist, collector, and protectionist. Over the years Dennis had theaters, put on programs in other’s theaters, homes, overseas, where ever there was a job. Follow the link to see his Wikipedia page.

At some point we acquired a weight machine and needed to find a place for it to live. The room was the only place it really worked. Except that it was just a bit too tall. After some measuring we cut our a piece of the ceiling between the joists, so the high point would fit.

When we were planning our remodel it was decided to remove the room. It was definitely not up to code, and any inspections would require changes anyway. As an old house, removal included noxious materials. Lead paint was a layer or two down, and not too bad to deal with as it only was exposed when the wall or ceiling board was cut. But the vinyl floor tiles had asbestos. So this was my introduction to asbestos removal. Masks, bags and special dumps. In the end this opened up a larger more usable basement space.

By contrast, the work today was limited.

Wiped down all of the exercise equipment.  The weight machine has been joined by a recumbent bicycle, elliptical, and a piece that can be used for sit-ups and other things. Most of this was cleaning accumulated dust. The equipment does get used pretty regularly, by Carl primarily.

Swept and vacuumed and mopped about half of the space. There’s a fan running to assist drying.

North end of the basement.

In the picture the white areas are concrete that was painted with a coating to try and stop water seeping through the walls and floor. It may have worked to some degree as it had been several years since we had an issue. The darker areas on the floor are where seeps came up. It’s not wet now, but the white coloring is gone.

Okay, so this is not really interesting information, but it is a record for me.

Part D

January 11, 2026

One of our jaunts today was to pick up prescriptions. It was the first big order on our Medicare plan. Of the seven prescriptions, 6 had a $0 cost. The 7th was over $600. For a 3 month supply. This almost hit the deductible for the year. We knew this was coming and had stocked up as much as we could on the old health care plan where the same order would have been $60. We may reexplore the Canadian drug pipeline that we had used when a previous health plan had similarly high costs as we’re paying now. But with tariffs and other political issues I’m not sure it will be as easy as it was several years ago.

Volunteer, Maybe

January 9, 2026

Our big outing today was applying to volunteer. Actually step 2 of the application process. The first part was online, several months ago now. This part was called a tryout and was actually an interview. The questions were either a follow-up on the earlier application and a few new questions.

Part 1 had 24,000 applicants. 6,000 made the cut to Part 2. Apparently 2,400 will be chosen from this group. What are our chances? Who knows.

2026 FIFA World Cup

We want to be involved when the World Cup, somehow. The most likely scenario is going down to the stadium area and hanging out to participate in the vibe. The second scenario would be landing a volunteer gig. The third scenario is managing to get a ticket through one of the lotteries.

Carl only applied because I wanted to. If we don’t get chosen I will be a little disappointed, but fine. Carl will be fine either way.

The focus is really on having the soccer world come to Seattle. However it turns out for us.

Volunteer Logo