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I have a power drill…

newdesk-copyWhen my children were little and I worked from home, I had tons of time to do home renovation projects. My husband would go to work, and he would arrive home to a different home.

Once, in the middle of a tile grouting project, I received a phone call from the school. My daughter was sick. I picked her up with forest green grout all over my arms and hands. I know enough to be dangerous when it comes to home improvement, and I get ideas and want to do them RIGHT now. This means my husband goes to work, and he returns home to find a new floor in the kitchen or our bedroom completely redone.

And that is just when he was gone for a normal 8 to 5 workday.

Right now, my husband is working in West Virginia. He left last Monday, and he hasn’t heard an exact date that he will return. Imagine the damage home improvement projects I can do! We had hoped he would be home by now, but he is there for another week. I say this despite no one telling him that he will be returning home in a week. The company actually hasn’t said WHEN he would return home. I, however, am saying he will be home in a week. It is the power of positive thought. Plus, if he isn’t home in a week, I will seriously be trying to figure out how to get THERE! After all, there are benefits to working online — I can work from anywhere. And the kids won’t have anything going on (other than Justin who is taking a class at our local community college the first week in August).

Anyway, back to the fact that I have a drill. When my husband goes away and leaves me at home, I get ideas of what I can do. And there are LOTS of projects that need to be done.

Here are just a few:
1. Put office back together
2. Finish Justin’s bedroom floor
3. Figure out what to do in the kitchen where the old fridge was located
4. Stain back deck
5. Finish cabinet project
6. Help girls paint their bedroom (they are actually doing it, I just have to supervise)
7. Help Justin paint his bedroom and fix the holes he made in his wall
8. Shampoo living room rug
9. Fix the one tile on the kitchen counter that keeps falling off
10. Clean out the garage
11. Paint my bedroom
12. Finish the trim in hallway

There are other things on my to-do list, but these are the things that I want to do.

The big things that I really want to do are my office and the kitchen. These two rooms are related. Back in March when hubby went to West Virginia in the first place, I got a bee in my bonnet and rearranged my kitchen. While I was doing this, I used mostly things that were already in the house. So I raided other rooms. When I was trying different configurations, I took apart my desk in my office. That was in March, and I have not had a desk in my office since March.

When you don’t have a desk in your office, it doesn’t really function as an office. It very easily turns into a room you might see in one of those organization shows. Pay no attention to the mess behind the curtain. OK, so it isn’t really up to the organization show standards, but if I didn’t stop it NOW it could have been a contender. After all, the office is only 8×8, and it had a LOT of stuff inside it. For that matter, it still has a lot of stuff inside it, but it is all office stuff. Well except for the vacuum cleaner (had to vacuum up the saw dust) and the power drill.

I should also note that in the picture of that office, you will notice the far wall looks kind of strange. The top two-thirds of the wall is a bulletin board. The bottom one-third is one-of-a-kind wainscoting that looks kind of strange in the picture. I love wooden crates, and the wainscoting is two old wooden crates that have been dismantled. Some of the wood still has faded writing on it. When I want to make my office look fancier, I cover that far wall with deep red curtains that complete cover it.

So, I have tackled putting my office back together. And it is almost there. But now I have stuff in my living room that I need to figure out where to go.

And there is a change in the office. Before, my office desk was a one-person desk, which was perfect because it is MY office, and I am only one person. This was before I had a laptop.

Now, my office is mostly a place where I store stuff. I have also taken over a corner in my living room. There I have the textbooks I am currently using and a laser printer plus some pens.

The office is a place where my desktop computer is and where the internet and wireless hub is located. We actually have two working desktop computers, and I wanted to place them both in the office. But my old desktop didn’t really allow for a lot of room for two desktops. So I needed a new desktop surface, and I have known this for about a year or so. This was one reason I was willing to dismantle my office last March.

This week, I was at a second-hand store, and I saw the perfect desktop. It was actually a drop-down table. It was meant to be mounted on to a wall. It would be flat against the wall when you weren’t using it, and when you needed it, it would fold up and the legs would fold out. But it was a table, so it was much deeper than what I needed for my desk. This meant it was perfect for my new desktop.

Why? Because I could cut it to the right depth, and I could use the extra depth for my keyboard tray. And it worked. I reused the keyboard drawer slide-out thingy that I already had, which is good because that thing was like $20 when I bought it new. I measured and used the circular saw and my battery-operated drill, and I had a new desktop. But then I needed to drill holes in my new desktop for the computer cords, and I couldn’t find the big paddle-bit. I finally did find one, but it was smaller than I needed. I made it work.

Those last four words scare my husband. It is the difference between DIY and professional work. Weird things happen when DIY people decide “I’ll make it work.” Someday someone might look at the holes I drilled for my power cords and wonder who let the demented beaver do this work, but my cords fit and when my computers are in place, you can’t see them.

I still need to put up my corkboard tiles on the wall behind my desk, but the little sticky things that came with them really don’t work that well. So the office is partially done with a good outlook that it might actually be finished this weekend. I also have to figure out to do with all of the stuff that is now sitting right outside the office.

Things from the office that I now need to find a place for other than sitting in my living room right outside the office door.

Things from the office that I now need to find a place for other than sitting in my living room right outside the office door.

And despite not having the office done, I did tackle another project. I was at my local home improvement store pricing cabinets to put in that place where the old fridge was that the new fridge won’t fit, and I was on my way out of the store. I hadn’t actually purchased anything. I hadn’t planned on purchasing anything. I was just there for planning purposes. I learned that an unfinished base cabinet is about $111. A finished base cabinet is about $160, which I think is cheap enough that I would buy it over the unfinished version. That doesn’t include countertops, but I have the countertop that was there before the old fridge was there, plus I have the tile that I could do instead, so I wasn’t worried.

While there, I also priced carpet. Justin needs an area rug in his room. He has needed an area rug in his room for a very LONG time, but area rugs are expensive. And he is a 10-year-old boy. And I just didn’t want to spend $300 plus on a rug that I would put in his room when I knew it probably would be ruined.

Anyway, on my way out of the store I noticed a cart by the shopping carts. It was a carpet remnant. It was 8×12, and it was marked down to $39.02. I knew that the cheap area rugs that are 5×8 go for around $30 at stores like Walmart. The rug was a dark gray color. I thought for about two seconds and bought it.

What I didn’t think about was how I was going to get it home. I had driven the truck “just in case” I found a cabinet bargain. So Amanda and I carried the carpet out to the truck, and we put it in the back and strapped it in. The carpet was on a tube, and it was 12-feet long. The truck bed is shorter than the standard 8-foot bed. This meant that above the truck’s cab was a good length of carpet sticking up. One lady noticed, and she asked me, “Did you know your truck has an erection?” Then I had to explain to Amanda, my 13-year-old daughter, what an erection was….

Anyway, we brought the carpet home, and it fit in Justin’s room very nicely. The carpet was a rectangle, and Justin’s room must be about 13×12, but two feet of that 12 is closet and doorway, so the carpet fit in his floor space with about a half-foot of space around the edges. In other words, it was the perfect area rug size for his room for less than $40. The dark gray looks great in his room.

The next thing I plan to do is also already started and not finished. I had bought a wood-cabinet a few months ago with plans to paint it and make it a peninsula in my kitchen. That was before we bought the new fridge. It was also before hubby said he didn’t want me to use it in the kitchen. But hubby is away. I plan to finish painting the cabinet and putting the doors and hardware back on and then, I am not quite sure what I will do with it. I am still going to try it in the kitchen, but I’m not sure it will work like I planned now that we have the new fridge in the new location.

So out of my list of projects the only one I have finished is the rug in Justin’s room. By Monday, I hope to finish my office and the cabinet and have a good start on cleaning out the garage. The garage won’t be too bad. It is mostly just moving everything out so I can sweep and then putting things away neatly. The things I have to move out are pretty easy to move — the cabinet that I need to paint will be the hardest — like the riding lawn mower and the grill and the log splitter. Most are on wheels, which helps.

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Give a Mom a Fridge

fridgeand she’ll soon realize she has to rethink the entire decorating style of her kitchen….

In case you haven’t heard me whine about this already, (and I haven’t done so here – Yet) my fridge died. It was a slow death that was really very sad because we just bought the fridge 7 years ago. The death started about a month ago with a mysterious yellowish fluid at the bottom of my fridge. I thought maybe something was leaking, and I cleaned out my fridge. I didn’t find anything that could cause the yellow stuff, but I wasn’t too worried about it. I have children after all, which means mysteries happen.

But things quit working or rather quit keeping things cool. It started with my freezer, and it slowly moved on to the regular fridge. A camping trip allowed us to empty the fridge and leave it unplugged in case anything was frozen up. When we came back, I plugged it back in. Within a day or so, I realized the fridge was running but not keeping anything cool. I moved everything to the camper fridge, and I threw away anything questionable.

Which meant that today, hubby and I went fridge shopping. Back in March, I had rearranged our kitchen and placed our fridge kiddy-corner from where it used to be. Hubby was still getting used to going to the opposite side of the kitchen to grab something from the fridge.

When we went shopping, we were looking for certain features. I wanted a freezer on the bottom, and I would have really liked a French-door fridge, but I figured it was WAY out of our price range. I also didn’t want to buy the brand of the fridge we were replacing. Still, just a freezer on the bottom is a pricey addition to the fridge search. All of our appliances are white, and I didn’t expect we’d change that.

Then, we actually went shopping. Lowe’s had a French-door fridge on sale for under $1,000, which was about the price I expected to pay for the freezer-bottom fridge I was looking for. Plus, the salesman pointed out that there was a dent in the fridge, so he was pretty sure we’d be able to get even more off the price. But it was not white. It was stainless-look.

I was really loving the idea of a French-door fridge, but I was a little leary of the dent, and the stainless-look wasn’t fooling me. The dent was in the top corner, and it had also cracked the hinge on the inside. I was worried about how the crack would deteriorate over time. I can handle a dent, but I didn’t need a door that would fall off. But it was the French-door style!

In the meantime, I wasn’t seeing anything else I wanted. I kept wandering the aisles checking everything out, and hubby wasn’t sure he wanted a fridge with the freezer on the bottom. He was worried freezer items would be buried and forgotten. Plus, my daughter Amanda was with us, and she wanted a fridge with a water/ice dispenser although I wasn’t so sure about that.

Hubby saw a side-by-side that he liked, and he wanted me to look at it. It had the water dispenser Amanda wanted, which is usually what I don’t like about the side-by-sides — they take up all the freezer space. But Whirlpool has this new ice maker thing that is in the door and doesn’t take up space. Plus, it was stainless-steel (the real stuff), 25.4 cubic feet and under $1,000, and the salesman pointed out that certain brands (including Whirlpool) were 10 percent off today, and we were sold for under $900.

Besides the price, I am in love with the new fridge. It is huge even for a side-by-side. It has a water-filtered water dispenser and an ice dispenser. The water/ice panel is fancy and computerized with little lights, and it has a little indicator that will tell us when we need to replace the water filter.

I knew when we bought it that the new fridge would not fit where the old fridge went, but I kept an open mind. I was hoping it would fit, but it didn’t. The space is 32 inches, and the new fridge is over 36 inches wide. The new shelving units I had installed where the fridge used to be (before March) had to be removed. The new fridge fits in the original old spot, but there is no longer any room for shelves next to it.

In the meantime, the new shelves won’t fit where the old fridge was at either. They are wider than 32 inches. This is a problem because before the old fridge, the space held a dishwasher, so the flooring in our kitchen didn’t extend to this corner. This means we will have to do one of the following:

  1. Buy a new dishwasher;
  2. Buy a new base cupboard; OR
  3. Install new flooring

OK, new flooring is out of the question. A new dishwasher would have to be a Whirlpool stainless steel to match, which means another $600 at least and that isn’t happening. So we need to buy a nice base cupboard that will fit. OK, that will take care of that corner.

But then where am I going to put the pantries, and if I don’t figure out where to put them, where am I going to put all of the stuff that was in the pantries? Will I be able to fit the stuff into the new arrangement? My kitchen is only 12×12, and it has two doorways including one very large doorway, so there isn’t a lot of space to work with to begin with, and the new fridge is huge.

Now I have to figure out a way to make everything fit and keep the extra storage space without spending any more money (or at least not very much money). After all, now I need to save up to replace my white stove and microwave with the stainless-steel versions…. I’m not in a hurry to do that, but it will be a goal.

Danger, Couple Working

Steve (my husband) and I had grand plans for this weekend. We planned to do some work on the house. Things like put the trim up around the window in the kitchen, put insulation in the crawl space above the mud room and seal some cracks to make our home warmer. Along with things like preventing ice build up along our roof line.

We got the insulation in the crawl space above the mud room finished.

Steve crawled around among the joists, placing the insulation and filling some gaps, while I watched from the top of the ladder willing to hand things to him, and go fetch. He had finished, and he sat back and looked around the space. I started down the ladder prepared to let him come down. That’s when he saw it. A gap he wanted to fill with insulation way over in the far corner where the roof line is just inches from the floor line.

He spread himself out careful to place body parts only on the wood and not on the drywall. Then he asked me to toss him the can of foam stuff. I did, and it bounced back at me, a foot or so out of Steve’s reach.

Know where this is going do ya?

He reached back, and somehow his body shifted, and there he was, dangling from two 2x4s, his feet coming through the mudroom ceiling, and dust everywhere.

That’s right, he went through the ceiling, knocking out an entire piece of drywall. He’s sore, but OK. We happened to have an extra piece of drywall in the garage, so we didn’t have to make any trips. We measured and cut and attempted to put the drywall piece back in the opening. It didn’t fit. We measured again. Repeat. Repeat.

Needless to say, my normally cool husband got a bit testy. He doesn’t like home improvement stuff to begin with, and this just sort of pushed him a bit too much. But we got it done. Although we do need to mud and tape the piece back in place. He even managed to go back in the crawl space and put the insulation back where it belonged.

But the unexpected extra work and clean up delayed our other planned projects. Eventually we shall get to them, right?

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Middle of Nowhere

I’ve established here before that I live in the middle of nowhere, a real BFE type of place. A place where not only does the waitress know my coffee preference, she also knows my in-laws, grand in-laws, and could most likely name my kids and neighbors. Small town, USA.

And there has been downsides to living in Small Town USA. Like no cable TV and dial-up the only option for accessing the Internet. However, we’ve lived here long enough that technology has caught up to our desire. We now have Satellite with TIVO! and DSL. So now everything I love about small town life has been upgraded to include everything I wanted about big city life. I have the best of both worlds.

I figured there wasn’t anything I would complain about. After all, I have DSL and Tivo. But today, I was going to enter a kitchen makeover contest sponsored by CBS and Lowe’s. Reading the rules (yes, I am anal enough to read the rules before entering) I learned you must live within 25 miles of a Lowe’s store to qualify. According to the Lowes.com store locator, the nearest store is 43 miles away. See for yourself.

Since I can’t win, I will encourage you to enter, but only if you qualify! Of course, if I was eligible there’s no way I would have shared that link. ;)

Big Screen Woes

There was another instance recently where I was very upset that I live in the middle of BFE. It had to do with our wide-screen TV. Three Sundays ago, our wide-screen TV shut off while we were watching it. It acted as if we had lost power, but it was the only thing that went off. We tried to turn it back on, but the green indicator light came on for a few seconds and then would go off. It was in, I later learned, "fail-safe mode." The warranty expired 6 months ago. Isn’t that sweet?

Finding someone to repair it wasn’t easy. The nearest authorized repairman was more than 50 miles away and would charge a minimum of $50 and $1 a mile to come to the house. That’s $150 without fixing anything, and another $150 if a second service call was necessary. They suggested we take the TV to them. Right. The thing ways more than 300 pounds.

Finally, a service tech came and it wasn’t the authorized people. This service tech took all of the guts out of the TV and left, promising to call back this week.

I miss our wide-screen TV. When we first got it, I thought it’d be more for Steve than me. But I really like it. More than I ever thought I would. Plus with the wide-screen out of service, we brought our TV from our bedroom into the living room. It’s changed our entire morning routine. We used to turn on the morning news and listen to it as we got dressed. But now, with the TV in the living room, we don’t hear as much news as we used to. Hopefully, it’ll be repaired soon.

It could have been worse

As bad as being without our WS TV is, I learned this weekend that it could have been worse. This past week, we’ve had a mystery wet spot in the carpet right outside our bathroom. This has happened before when the children get a bit rambuctious (speeling iz optional, remember) in the bathtub. But usually that dries up pretty quickly.

However, this was still wet after three days with a fan blowing directly on it. Finally, on Thursday, it was dry. Whew. Then Friday morning I noticed the carpet in the hall was wet again, only this time it wasn’t anywhere near the bathroom. Uh-oh.

So I started to investigate. And that’s when I learned my washing machine had been leaking all week long. The reason it dried for a day, was because Wednesday I  caught up on  laundry. It was wet Friday because Steve did a load Thursday night.

Not having a working wash machine when you have a family of 6 is the stuff horror movies and nightmares are made of. Trust me on this.

Our wash machine and dryer reside in a deep closet right off our hallway. There is a ton of stuff that we keep stored and organized in this space, incuding chargers for batteries, and just lots of things. I had to pull it all out, including the washer and dryer.

During the week, the water leak absolutely ruined the tile floor in there. It all had to be pulled up. Luckily, the floor beneath it wasn’t warped.

I was of two minds. First, I knew I would not go any longer than today without a working wash machine. It just wasn’t going to happen. Second, this seemed like a perfect time to replace our old Maytag with a new version. I’ve been drooling over the capabilities of the Whirlpool Duet or Maytag Neptune versions for a couple years. Anything, something more modern than my current set.

Steve, however, was less enamored with the idea of buying new. Especially when he looked online and learned prices range from $300 to $,1000. So. He fixed it. It was some filter that needed replaced and cost less than $10 to fix. So far, everything seems to be working. And I’ve been checking for leaks and not finding any.

It looks like I’ll have to wait for a new one. Even after my arguments about how a new set will be more energy efficient, Steve still wants to wait to buy a new set. However, I do know I’m going to start researching, and saving. Because with a family of 6, there’s NO WAY I"m going to haul laundry to a laundromat.

I was even willing to give up our upcoming vacation to buy a new set.

Vacation Plans

On Friday, Aug. 19, I turn 34. Steve and I will be taking the kids to Mackinac Island this weekend. It’s a trip that Steve and I did when I turned 18. Now we’ll have all four kids, and instead of staying in a hotel with a hot tub, we’ll be staying in a tent at a state campground.

This will be the first time we’ve gone camping as a family by ourselves. That means I have to remember everything. Normally, we camp with Steve’s parents, and if I forget something, my mother-in-law has it. Bug spray, jackets, cooking gear, whatever. Now not only do we have to supply it all ourselves, we have to figure out how to transport all of it in a minivan.

We had initially thought we’d take the kids here on Friday, but there’s so much other stuff to do that we are thinking now we don’t want to spend a day in a water park. We’ll be getting a Heritage family ticket that will let us tour all four historic parks.

We’re also planning our family vacation for next year. The kids won’t be going to summer camp. Instead, we plan on going to Disney World. But I am very disheartened that hotels limit the number of people that can stay in one room. I don’t need two rooms just because I have a family of 6 instead of the more typical family of four or five.  If we added up weight and divided, I wouldn’t have a family of six. Still making plans, and haven’t finalized anything. We want to go during Spring Break, but our school hasn’t finalized the teacher contracts, so who knows when Spring Break will be.

True to Life Comic

Steve and I realized Sunday’s Baby Blues comic strip was a window into our life not that many years ago. See for yourself. You will have to change the date to Aug. 14 to see the strip that I’m referring to.

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Design Dilemma

I’ve lived in this house for 8 years, but since I was a kid I’ve had a knack for arranging my space in an appealing and artful, yet useful, way. That has carried into my adulthood where I have managed to create a welcoming, yet organized mudroom.

Kitchen1 A very cute, definitely a bit of country, but very clean and white and full of sunlight kitchen. I did the tile counters myself. I also made the little shelfs next to my dishwasher, and I cut down a bookcase to make a shelf on top  of my dishwasher to hold a variety of items including my large pot and crock pot. I filled an awkward space next to the fridge with shelves, but the shelves open onto the kitchen on the short end, rather than the length of them to fit the deep fridge space. It’s become a great storage space for things like the kids’ lunch boxes and my griddle and dehydrator. They are in easy reach but you don’t see them all the time.

Quilt This quilt was made by my husband’s grandmother. I pulled colors from the quilt to design a very comfortable matching master bedroom. I used three shades of green paint and painted the walls, trim and most of the furniture to match.

I have been creative. For instance, I bought on clearance this ship-shaped shelf from Meijers with four basket drawers. Shelf The baskets had horribly ugly shells wired and glued onto them. But I ripped those off and replaced them with various jewelry that has a Noah’s ark theme. The baskets, by the way, are wonderful for organizing my girls’ hair things, and other items like nail clippers and nail files and all that little bathroom stuff. I filled my small bathroom with more Noah-themed items until finally I came up with a space. Although I now have so much Noah-related items they have overflowed a bit into the kitchen, my office and even my living room. The rest of the bathroom was filled out wiBathroomth a variety of Noah’s ark items that I collected over the years. A number of the pieces, including some wood arks and prints were purchased on eBay. Others were picked up as gifts or in stores. It’s a very long, narrow room and I really like this shade of blue.

Office I turned a formal entry into a very workable (although small) office. Where the coat closet used to be (pictured) made a wonderful desk area. Kitchen cabinets and counters help provide a lot of storage space. Behind me, as I sit at the desk, is an entire wall of bookshelfs. This is where the entry door used to be. The wall area was only about 15-inches deep and the only furniture that would fit on that side was a wall of bookcases. So it was good use of the space. It is definitely just a one-person office, but it is packed with storage and very organized (most of the time). Another eBay find (the advertisement for the pens hanging on the wall) help decorate the area. Chalkboard paint and cork board make the wall behind the desk useful too. I especially like that my desk is two-tiered. It makes a great work space.

My house definitely has a country feel. I like it because it’s comfortable and not too formal. It also allows for great re-uses and you can find thrifty items that are very cool. Although not as country, the kids’ rooms also seem to be pulled together well.

But then I have my living room. And frankly, I don’t know what to do in my living roomCars_1. It’s big – 20×20. And there is a large opening to the kitchen, a doorway to the hall, a doorway to my office, a big bay window, two large windows and a smaller window. I also have to include hubby’s NASCARs into the decoration. As well as our black wide-screen TV. These things, in case you didn’t notice, aren’t country-themed. 

And so when it comes to my living room, the room where we spend a majority of our time, I’m at a loss on how to decorate it. When I try to layout the furniture, things don’t balance. For instance, the bay window is perfectly balanced when you are outside of the house and looking in. But inside the house, the bay window is to the right side of the wall. So furniture placement along that wall becomes awkward. I also have to be aware of things like cold-air returns and heater vents.

Although the room has a lot of furniture (two couches, two chairs, four end tables, a VCR cabinet, a lateral file, two bookcases and the TV), there is still a lot of space. Eventually I’d like to add a wall full of bookcases and cabinets. That would go along a wall by the main thoroughfare in the room.

I’m just having trouble coming up with a furniture arrangment that is warm and welcoming and makes sene without blocking something important. If I put the couches out in the room, it really closes the space in, but if I leave them against the wall, it seems way too much space. It’s driving me nuts. Plus I haven’t figured out what color to paint the walls. I have time to decide. But this is so unlike me. I have no inspiration and I really don’t know how to fit that NASCAR stuff and TV(a must stay) into the rest of the room/house design.

For some reason, I’m not finding a solution in my addiction to design magazines. ;)

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