May 10th, 2006, 9:24 pm PDT by Greg
To recap: I was tired to start with, and had walked every single aisle in a Super Target by this point in the day. Super Targets are bigger than regular Targets, you know.
The two that were leaving the new apartment were having trouble getting everything packed up. We had already told them that we were coming into town with practically nothing, so we were happy to take their futon, desk, and whatever. They didn’t want to move it. Everybody wins.
This set off a couple of calls from them: do you want an old radio? a desk chair? Sure! So, it’s hard to say we didn’t encourage them to leave stuff. When we got there, the house had a bunch of stuff left, and the general appearance of clean. Not all useful stuff, but not bad.
But, the more we looked around, the worse it got. Everything looked clean, but every surface in the kitchen was a little sticky; all of the floors were a little gritty; the bathrooms had been cleaned in a short-term way (toilets, surfaces wiped down), but were by no means clean (built-up gunk around taps, mildewed shower curtain). Pretty much everything needed to be cleaned in one way or the other.
And the stuff! Every door and cupboard was a new surprise. Twenty different old crusty bathroom cleaners. A whole cupboard full of disposable plates and cups. Three boxes of wooden matches, a case of matchbooks, and a few other packs of matches (all in the same drawer). Three part bottles of hoisin sauce, and another three ketchups.
Two days later, and thing are looking a lot better. We still have a few things to take care of, but the place is definitely liveable.
To give you an idea of my status… we went to get a few more groceries yesterday afternoon. Actual groceries this time: food to eat, not to have stocked in the kitchen. We were in aisle 9 (of maybe 16) in this store, and I honestly wasn’t sure I was going to make it to the end.
I took the evening off, and I feel a lot better today.
Posted in Moving | 2 Comments »
May 9th, 2006, 8:23 pm PDT by Greg
I was already tired and well shopped-out when we realized that the 10% discount wasn’t just for the first purchase on the card, but the first day. We could still make another trip and get the discount.
So, at about 6:30, we unloaded the car and headed back to Target: did I mention that it is a “Super Target” that’s bigger than a regular Target (like a Walmart Supercenter)?
We needed bikes: it’s a very bike-accessible town, the buses aren’t great on the weekend, and we want to avoid buying a car. We don’t need quality, since they only really have to not fall apart for a couple of years of commuting. So, cheap “real” bikes at $300 weren’t worth it. To Target and the sub-$150 price point.
We ended up buying two bikes, a back-seat full of groceries, and some rope. Why rope? Two bikes don’t fit in the Kia Rio we rented. We had to take off the front tire and awkwardly tie the rest into the trunk. Of course, we didn’t have a knife, and about 50 feet of rope, so it took some time: 20 minutes in a Target parking lot, trying to secure them.
We returned and after all this, finally got into the new apartment…
Posted in Moving | Comments Off on Suuuuper Target!
May 9th, 2006, 8:18 pm PDT by Greg
I haven’t blogged for a couple of days: no time. It’s been busy. I’ll parcel out the story over a few posts.
On Sunday, we went to a local mall. This is the sort of thing that calms Kat down, and wears me out. After, we went by a Winners-like place or two on the way home and got a bunch of kitchen stuff.
Monday was our day to move in to the new place. We weren’t going to get in until the afternoon, so Kat worked in the morning and I drove around Carrboro to try to figure out where stuff was.
In particular, I was looking for a good grocery store. The only one I could find near our house was the Weaver Street Market. Vancouver types can think of Famous Foods–very granola-hippy-earth-loving. Lots of all-natural stuff that the biologists we met assured us we’d love. But sometimes, you just want to buy paper-towels without feeling like you’re personally responsible for ruining the planet.
After some effort, I found a Harris Teeter about the same distance from the apartment. It’s a nice, regular grocery store, maybe like a Save-On-Foods. I was pleased: I wasn’t going to be leaving Kat in a place without accessible groceries.
The people still weren’t out of the apartment, so I picked up Kat and we went shopping. We went to a Target (think: one step up from Walmart) about 30 minutes away. The goal was to get cleaning stuff, the last kitchen stuff, fans, and all the other stuff you can’t live without. Because we were buying so much, we signed up for a Target card and got 10% off. Nice.
Then, things started to turn…
Posted in Moving | Comments Off on Lead-up to the move
May 8th, 2006, 12:47 pm PDT by Kat
I have my onyen (pronouced like onion). It’s apparently the only number you’ll even need. I can now set up a UNC e-mail account, hook my computer up to the network, and tons of other things that have yet to learn.
In other school news, I’ve set up the starling cages. Took pictures of the room and the cages that will be uploaded to Greg’s gallery sometime later this week. That room will never be this clean ever again.
Posted in Moving | Comments Off on Have onyen, am contributing member of UNC now
May 7th, 2006, 10:15 pm PDT by Kat
Holy crap does it rain hard here. It’s nothing like the misting in Vancouver. It’s more like the torrential rains of Los Angeles when it actually rains. We were caught out shopping for household stuffs (pots, cooking utensils, pillows) when the sky decided to open up and pour. Once we got home it was actually nice to listen to the rain, but running through it with bags of purchases was not so nice.
Oh yeah, and Greg sent us into a small panic at the mall. About 40 minutes after we got there, he realized that he didn’t have the car key. Since we have a rental car, the key has the make, model, color, and license plate number of the car on the key ring. So of course, we ran around the mall trying to find the key – stopped back at stores where he tried stuff on, back-tracked to where he took a picture of a chocolate fountain for Suyoko, checked in with a store’s lost and found, and finally went back to the car to see if he had dropped it there. All this was going on, and we realized that Enterprise Car Rental is not even open on Sundays, so if we can’t find the key, there’s noone to call. Even if CAA/AAA unlocked the door for us, we wouldn’t be able to start it up to drive it! Luckily, we found the key lying next to the car door! Too much excitement for 1 day.
Tomorrow we move to our summer apartment!
Posted in Moving | 1 Comment »
May 7th, 2006, 9:57 am PDT by Kat
It’s Sunday
It’s cool and raining.
We were up at 7:30 to eat waffles.
The stores here don’t open until noon on Sundays, and it turns out only 2 busses in Chapel Hill run on Sundays.
I guess this means I really do have to get a bike. Eep!
Posted in North Carolina | Comments Off on Rainy Sunday Morning
May 6th, 2006, 11:16 pm PDT by Kat
Just a few quick things:
Greg changed my comments section so that I now accept comments from users that do not have blogger accounts. Didn’t know you had to specify that! Sorry!
Saw a Pileated Woodpecker and a Blue Jay just outside Keith’s sunroom window this afternoon, and a Barred Owl in the trees in Keith’s backyard. Oli, you DEFINITELY have to visit, and we can go birding (i.e., you can ID all of the birds, and I can say “yeah, that’s was definitely a …”
Posted in General Life | 1 Comment »
May 6th, 2006, 10:48 pm PDT by Kat
Spent a lot of today outside. Toured the campus after dropping off a bag of “field” clothes on my desk in my new office. Showed Greg “Davie Poplar” which is a large tree in one of the quads on campus. Apparently “as long as Davie Poplar stands, the University of North Carolina will prosper.” This explains why there’s a guide wire from the tree to something more stable as it is leaning to one side. There is also a Davie Poplar Jr. and a Davie Poplar III. I think people are actually realizing that one day this original tree will come down, and then what!
Saw the new apartment, which is pretty nice. Best feature, it has a dishwasher! Yippee! We’re also getting a lot of furniture (a HUGE desk, a futon, some chairs, a couple of bookcases, and some side tables!) from the previous tenant who is ecstatic that we’re taking his furniture off his hands.
Came back to Keith and Sabrina’s for a couple of games of Bocce-ball with Keith and Sabrina and one of Sabrina’s grad students, Lisa, and her boyfriend, Brian. Had a nice little potluck dinner afterwards.
Tomorrow morning Keith’s making waffles!
Posted in North Carolina | Comments Off on Davie Poplar, dishwasher and Bocce
May 6th, 2006, 5:47 pm PDT by Greg
Nothing too eventful today. We saw the new apartment. It’s nice and fairly roomy, at least by the standards of our place in Vancouver.
Speaking of which…
Two days before we moved here (the Monday, I guess), our landlord in Vancouver asked to meet with us to talk about “our schedule”. It turns out that his girlfriend is moving into his place with her son (the landlord lives upstairs). That will be too many people for their space upstairs. They need to expand into the basement, where we live.
So, we’re getting kicked out. Gently. The landlord knows our schedule sucks for this, so he’s being as helpful as possible–offering whatever help he can to find a place, or move (he can get a good rate on movers, apparently). But, it doesn’t change the fact that we have to move in Vancouver while living in North Carolina.
The current plan is to get the place packed by the movers (they come and put your stuff in boxes, then take it to the new place). I was going to come back to Vancouver briefly in mid-June anyway. It looks like that’s going to be extended, so I can get our stuff to a new place on July 1. I’ll probably leave the place (mostly) packed-up, and come back at the end of August to deal with it.
Of course, this added stress that we didn’t need when trying to pack for the pseudo-move to NC. If he’d told us a week sooner, we might have been able to get everything ready for the movers, put everything in storage, and saved the rent. Maybe.
Practical upshot: we need to find a new place in Vancouver for the start of July. If anyone comes across a two-bedroom place in North Burnaby, email me. We’re also thinking about the Univercity (stupid name, though it may be)–it’s close to work, and we know all the units are new, at least.
We may also have to move in NC on August 1 (it’s a sublet, so we knew that). That would be three new apartments in one summer. Shouldn’t that qualify for disaster relief or something?
Posted in Moving | Comments Off on The Vancouver Crisis
May 6th, 2006, 12:33 am PDT by Greg
Not too eventful today. We got a TV (19″ LCD) and DVD player (recorder actually–looking forward to seeing how it works).
I actually did some looking around online for prices: it turns out that with the US dollar so low (CDN$.90) and a little less sales tax here, everything costs almost the exact same amount. At least we aren’t getting hosed by the exchange rate. I can no longer say that George Bush never did anything for me.
We drove around Chapel Hill and Carrboro, trying to get the lay of the land. Found a dive-y pizza place that was packed full of people in Chapel Hill. Very good–exactly what we wanted.
For those who don’t know the situation, we are staying with Keith, Kat’s new supervisor, until our apartment is available on Monday. That means living out of suitcases, which is annoying, but I’m getting used to it. Today, Kat decided to re-pack all of the suitcases, so my nascent understanding of where everything was has evaporated. But, Kat found her Tevas, so there’s that.
Posted in Moving | 2 Comments »