Monday, March 26, 2007

Honeymoon

For all the people who thought our honeymoon was really neat, this is a list of specific places we went so you can help plan your future itinerary (pictures can be found on Picasa):
  • San Francisco
    • Fisherman's Wharf and Pier 39
    • Ghiradelli Square
    • Coastal Trail - I'm not sure where this technically starts, but we walked all the way from Fisherman's Wharf to Golden Gate Park (past the bridge). The really pretty parts include Marina Green, Crissy Field, Palace of Fine Arts (nearby), the bridge itself, Land's End, and Seal Rocks/Cliff House/Sutro Baths
    • Golden Gate Park - Dutch Windmill, Bison Enclosure, Japanese Tea Garden
    • Union Square
    • Chinatown
  • Mendocino and Fort Bragg
    • Russian Gulch State Park
    • Mendocino Headlands State Park
    • Van Damme State Park (Spring Ranch)
    • Jughandle State Reserve
    • MacKerricher State Park
    • Glass Beach
    • Mendocino Coast Botanical Gardens
    • Drive from SF to Mendocino on Highway 1
    • Drive through Navarro Redwoods State Park on Highway 128
  • Yosemite
    • Lower Yosemite Falls
    • Valley Floor Loop Trail
    • Mirror Pond (seasonal)
    • Vernal and Nevada Falls
    • Upper Yosemite Falls Trail
I would seriously recommend all these places. At one point I tried to star things I really liked in my travel journal, but I didn't get very far. Some of my favorites in Mendocino are MacKerricher and the Botanical Gardens. Watch out for priceyness in Mendocino. Fort Bragg is the cheaper version but it is also not nearly as nice. However, at only 10 miles apart, you can eat in Fort Bragg and save some money. Also try Tote Fete, Mendocino Bakery, and Mendocino Cafe.

Obviously I don't have anything new and exciting to write about. I'm currently waiting for my garden stone to dry so I can paint it. Next step - a garden.

Friday, March 23, 2007

A Trailer Trash Rainbow


Ain't she purdy?

No Impact Man

See the blog here and the mocking here. So I found this through a blog, Little Birds, that Ms. A links to, and it sounded pretty neat. The guy has even been featured in the NY Times. But I've read through some stuff and thought about it for awhile, and discussed it with my intelligent and skeptical sister, Karen, and I'm thinking this guy is cracked out. It is great to try to reduce your environmental impact, but seriously, no toilet paper? I use recycled paper. And while, yes, it is still waste, what about the water he is wasting with his 'cleansing bowls'? I just don't know about this. And to top it all off, he is hesitant to talk about what he thinks are "private" (despite the fact their lives are being filmed) like toilet and cleansing specifics, feminine hygiene, and birth control. We all know that CFLs are a good idea by now, but I think really most of us don't know what we should be doing about those pesky tampons and the fish-mutating birth control. Some help you are, No Impact Man.

I'm going to go there because he won't. Just in case you are wondering about the feminine side of things (although I realize some of my dear readers are not interested in contraception and by default having periods right now), some of No Impact Man's readers suggested the following: www.gladrags.com, www.thekeeper.com, and Mirena. To be honest, I am not an environmentalist in this arena of life. I like my trusty tampons and BCPs. However, I was recently thinking that maybe I could explore the use of an IUD or IUC to prevent the hormones that I inevitably pee out and travel to the waste water treatment plant from hurting nature. I am a little concerned about the copper-release aspect (IUD) and the hormones still used in Mirena, an IUC. Also, Mirena is most recommended for people who have already had children, although they claim as soon as it is taken out you return to your previous state of fertility. After a year of using it, it is supposed to reduce your period by 90% or eliminate altogether, thus making scary environmental options like The Keeper unnecessary. What do y'all think? For some reason, even though I'm all in favor of organic cloth baby diapers, I twinge at the idea of cleaning those re-usable pads. Eeew! As far as toilet habits go, I think recycled paper and 1.6gpf or dual flush toilets are just fine for us. Most people waste more water in the shower than in their daily toilet trips. Get a composting toilet if you want to, but for god sake, don't forgo toilet paper. I mean really!

In other, low impact living, here's what I do:
  • CFLs
  • Walk around town
  • Use heat as little as possible by bundling up
  • Use air as little as possible by opening doors and windows, or covering windows with thick shades in the summer
  • Recycle everything I possibly can
  • Try to limit purchases, or at least buy eco-friendly or recycled items
  • Compost food scraps
  • Try to turn off power strips at night
  • Drive a car that gets 40mpg
  • Currently trying to get creative and reuse things I currently have instead of buying things. I recently made a picture frame for some wedding pictures out of a partially broken old frame and some pretty paper. (Okay, it was my first try, so it's not that great...)

  • Line-dry clothes
  • Wash clothes in cold water. Most detergents now are designed for this. Speaking of, I use 7th Generation detergent.
Some things I would like to do:
  • Get rid of more things (mostly Matt's). And by get rid of, I mean donate, not throw away
  • Read magazines online instead of the paper version. But I love getting magazines in the mail y'all. Finding them in the box and flipping through them... It's just so, so textual.
  • Move to a small apartment with a smaller ecological footprint
  • Get rid of some furniture when we move and buy some smaller used, recycled, or eco-friendly items. I have my heart set on some things from Gaiam.
  • I have mixed feeling when it comes to buying things. Is it better to buy nothing or to buy eco-friendly and recycled items to support the market and encourage it. We can never honestly end consumerism, so wouldn't it be great if it was green consumerism? What do y'all think?
  • Not drive ever. I'm not sure how to go about this since Matt and I like to explore the lovely out-of-doors. Is this a sacrifice we should be making?
  • I would really like to get off those BCPs. I don't want to hurt the froggies!
  • Be more activist in encouraging green and healthy lifestyles.
I would like to hear from you, my dear readers. Any other suggestions or thoughts? Neat ideas? Things that would make better use of my time (like not wasting so much energy using this laptop)? Requests not to hear any more about a little bit gross bodily functions? While we're on the subject, I have seen some great links on Inhabitat to eco-underwear and lingerie as well as eco-sex toys. Enjoy!

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Something Neat

I've spent the better part of an afternoon browsing through Inhabitat. This is a great website. I'm not a design-freak, but I'm thinking I would like to start exploring the right side of my brain. Anyway, this site blogs about sustainable housing design, eco fashion design, and some other neat design-related things. I'm totally into buying an eco-prefab house someday. And the cardboard furniture kits (mostly for kids)? Really neat.

In other news, has anyone tried Good magazine? At first I wasn't sure if I liked it, but we just got our second issue and I think it's great. It also has a bit of a design-bent, but sort of more in how the magazine is put together and not it's content. Also, a subscription is $20 and the whole amount is donated to the charity of your choice (out of a list of 12 or so). We somehow ended up with two copies of the same issue, so if anyone would like to check it out, we'd be happy to send one to you.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Also, small towns and mail men

Monday morning we went to the PO to pick up our 7 days of mail that we missed on the honeymoon. We only got one tiny package, and we wondered aloud at the counter what had happened to the larger packages we were expecting. At any rate, we went home.

Around 3:30 pm, the mailman stopped by, in his personal vehicle, to let me know that the lady at the PO had forgotten to give us two large packages and that she felt really bad about it. He hadn't brought the packages because he didn't know if we were home, and I suppose he didn't want to be carting around someone else's packages in his own car. Maybe that is illegal. At any rate, he said we were on his way home and he just wanted to let us know. How nice! I can't even believe it. This would never happen in a big town. That is another reason why I love Socorro.

My return trip to the PO reminded me again why I don't like Socorro. I don't want to go into it.

Today's Blog is About my House


Okay, well I don't own a house, but we rent this rather large 3 bedroom manufactured home, of which you may have previously heard, in the sleepy town of Socorro where rent is quite low. I have discovered that in Albuquerque we will be able to rent a small 2 bedroom apartment for the same price as this house or a 1 bedroom apartment for slightly less than that. We all know this is not my favorite house. But it has wrought-iron screen doors on the front and the back that we love to have wide open, letting the breeze blow through. The back-yard is huge, although un-landscaped. It currently contains a shed, a horsehoe pit (two I guess) and a clothesline. Next door there is an empty lot. We have a lot off space. A lot.

I hate to clean this house. It is way too big. We ended up here because we wanted a 2 bedroom house or apartment so I could have a home office, but this was the only thing we could find that was not in some way scary. It is only scary by association (i.e. the houses down the street). But, I wonder if moving back into an apartment will make me feel closed-in. Granted, I love porches and balconies, and I don't have one here, so that would be nice. But won't it be loud? Won't the neighbors annoy me? Won't I wish I had a clothesline and a horseshoe pit? But then again the house might be clean. I don't know where all Matt's stuff would go. Hopefully Goodwill, but that is another story.

You know, I was just reading this, and I found it to be quite boring. Is my blog always quite boring? Is that why no one reads it except my sister (because she is family and she has to)? Oh well. No one has to read it. I just get bored so I like to think out loud. And today I am thinking about my house.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Workin' Girl

I accomplished so much today that I don't even know who I am anymore. I fixed the logic glitch (or two or three or four) in my model (I hope) and pretty much got it calibrated without crazy numbers. Then with my spare time I went ahead and revised the journal article that I have been sitting on for two months. I didn't finish, but I got a huge start and sent it off to my co-authors. Maybe sometime in the not-too-distant future you will find me if you Google search my name and Journal of Environmental Management. Just maybe. Then, and only then, will I be famous.

In other news, I am taking a poll. Who thinks I should go back to school? If so, part-time or full-time? I don't think I'm going to get any money out of them and tuition runs about $198/credit hour, of which I need 48 to graduate, unless they count some of my prior graduate credits. In addition, how in the hell do I know if I want to be a planner? As it turns out I didn't even want to be a hydrologist. And I stopped wanting to be an engineer about 7 years ago even though I am now a practicing (in name only) Environmental Engineer. Anyway, opinions anyone?

Monday, March 19, 2007

What California Taught Me

Ya'll. I love this word. Or contraction. Even though I always contract it in the wrong place. I think it looks better that way.

I have been back in Socorro, New Mexico, for about 12 hours now. We went to the post office this morning. There were 3 dogs outside, without leashes, patiently waiting for their owner, who was presumably inside. Inside, a woman with a baby pulled a ringing cell phone out of her cleavage, answered it while at the counter being helped, and proceeded to have a very loud, very annoyed conversation with someone who may or may not have been her mother about someone who may or may not have been the baby-daddy. (I don't even know how to write that 'word.') These are some of the reasons I know I am in Socorro. How else do I know? I live in a manufactured home. Let me just point out that there is not necessarily anything wrong with manufactured homes. But this manufactured home is very old (for a manufactured home) and very rickety. And it is in Socorro. That is what is wrong with it. How else do I know? It is quiet. That is a good thing about Socorro and is one of the reasons I sometimes like it here. The other being that I can walk places and there is a park down the street with tennis courts. The other is that it is not as scary as Albuquerque. The reasons I don't like it here are multitude. I will not go into them now.

On the last day of our honeymoon, as we were not flying out until 8pm, we stopped for a few hours in Berkeley to check out the town and campus and to see our friend Jenny again. Jenny and I used to have the same lives, sort of. We went to UA for two years and got degrees in hydrology. Then we both worked from home for two different National Labs making a lot of money. Now she is working on a PhD and I am still working for the National Lab. She misses the DOE. I wish I didn't know what the DOE was. Berkeley is beautiful.

Whenever I tell people I work from home, I get one of two responses. 1) Wow, that must be so nice! 2) Wow, I don't think I could handle that! I go back and forth between these responses in my head. 1) If I didn't work from home, I couldn't be writing this blog in the middle of the day. If I didn't work from home, I couldn't have slept in until 9 this morning in recovery from my honeymoon. If I didn't work from home, I wouldn't see my husband (!!) as much. If I didn't have this job, I would not be able to travel as much. 2) If I worked in an office, I would have a distinct line between work and home. If I worked in an office, I would not look around the house for things to clean and then never do it. If I worked in an office, I would talk to people other than my husband on a daily basis. If I worked in an office, I would probably get more work done.

In the beginning of my work from home, I did well. I have been slacking lately. I think it is because I know it will be over fairly soon and maybe sooner if I work too hard.

What California taught me is that I shouldn't take my DOE job for granted. I should aspire to live somewhere with public transportation and hiking down the street. It's not like I didn't know these things before. I mostly just thought the title was cute.

I think we will have to (get to?) move to Albuquerque soon. These are the things I want out of it:

  • Proximity to walking/jogging/hiking paths
  • Public transportation to UNM and my job (if I have one)
  • Weekly boxes from Los Poblanos Organics and a work-share to get 1/2 off
  • People to talk to and maybe even friends!
  • Things to do with my husband instead of watching Netflix

Will I miss Socorro? Will Matt ever miss Arizona (or admit it)? Will the grass always be greener? I assume so. On all three counts.

PS Do you love how I've been throwing the h-word around?

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Honeymoon

Matt is posting complete daily synopses (I use this term loosely) of our honeymoon on Baillie Blog. If you have a lot of time to kill, check it out. We are having a great time out here in sunny California, where we have not seen a drop of rain and fog for only an hour or so one morning. We must have done something good.

Tomorrow morning we leave the Mendocino Coast to travel to Yosemite, where instead of cliffs, beaches, and ocean, we will spend time with rocks, snow, and waterfalls. And probably a lot more people. And probably just as expensive. Our dinner tonight, which was cheap by Mendocino standards, cost $35. This is worse (monetarily) than being in Switzerland! I suspect we may also be without internet connections, so this could be the last blog until we return.

This afternoon, as we were sitting on a bench at our hotel overlooking the sea, we were discussing what we would have done with our honeymoon had Karen and Bernie not generously offered to send us on one. I guess they must have offered a long time ago, because I don't even remember contemplating this question before. We decided that we probably would have been staying at a Marriott in Phoenix and watching a lot of spring training. And that certainly does not sound bad, but we would have missed out on a lot of great things. Some highlights:

  • The trainee rental car shuttle driver in Oakland
  • The 'maze' between Oakland and San Francisco
  • AT&T Park and the Battlecry! (Evangelicals that prevented our tour)
  • A complete walking tour of San Francisco that totaled probably close to 5 miles the first day and over 10 miles the second day. (It's really the best way to see things and the whole coast is beautiful!)
  • Getting drunk with Jenny for old time's sake (I know you're not supposed to see people on your honeymoon, but we figured one day out of 10 wouldn't hurt.)
  • A cute little B&B on Washington Square with a cocktail hour, breakfast-in-bed, and a bay window view of the cathedral and Coit Tower.
  • Golden Gate Bridge
  • The drive on Highway One to Mendocino
  • An even cuter Inn with a fireplace, porch overlooking the sea, picnic tables overlooking the sea, benches right up on the sea clif, the nicest hostesses (I think this is a B&B term), and tasty breakfast.
  • Thai burritos
  • The entire Mendocino Coast: Mendocino Headlands State Park, Russian Gulch State Park, Point Cabrillo Light Station, MacKerricher State Park, Jughandle State Park, Spring Ranch State Park, Mendocino Coast Botanical Garden (we seriously hiked at all of these)
  • Seals and Sea Lions and Whales

I have to mention whales again because I am so excited about them. We kept looking for them for three days and never saw them. Finally this morning, at a park I didn't even want to go to, we started seeing spouts. And then we got out the binoculars and started seeing bodies that go with the spouts. Granted, we never saw them fully, but it was so cool! And while all this was happening, we watched some sort of heron-like bird fishing and eating his catch. He had some problems involving the fish or eel (not sure) flipping itself around the bird's beak. Very amusing. It was so fantastic!

Anyway, tonight is our last night in this great Inn, and tomorrow we venture on. We are pretty excited! Thanks again (so much) to Karen and Bernie and we will talk to ya'll later!

I just have to add a post-script that we have not turned into B&B people. We don't fit in at all, and yet I love it.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

UNM

The director called today to inform me that I have been accepted, but the funding question is quite vague. Nevertheless, one uncertain future item becomes somewhat more certain. Just what I love!

Photos and Credit Reports

I was feeling that my blog was a bit drab lately, without any visual stimulation. So this morning I took a few pictures to post. Part of the problem is that it turns out my digital camera, which is less than 1 year old, is not compatible with Windows Vista. My brand new computer can not see the images on it. So I have to download them to another computer and then transfer them over, which sucks. But anyway...

Jenga! Matt thinks it's funny to make it as unstable as possible as early as possible.













My new desk set up! (Gotta love the wood paneling background.) I got rid of the topper thing and bought some new recycled stuff from the Container Store. I have so much more room now - I love it.










Our mantle of wedding gifts! The pictures for the frames are in the mail now. (Of course the pictures above the mantle are old hat.) By the way, we have that cute ring frame, and we have no idea who it's from. Please let us know if it's from you or you know who it's from. We'd like to thank the proper person!










Our new plants! It wasn't very smart to buy them before we leave for 10 days, but if they die, so will all the others. So sad. This is when I wish I had friends. (Note China Doll!)










Our wedding album! Okay so I am lazy and I ordered it off snapfish, but I like it. Except the cover picture has some problems. But the inside is nice! (I am also in the process of scrapbooking the wedding. Just waiting for a few more things...Dad and Matt D. Not that they read this blog I'm sure.)











On a completely different note, take advantage of those free annual credit reports. I found some errors in mine. In fact, I couldn't access one of them because my name was spelled wrong in it, so I ended up having to pay for a combined report from all three in order to see it and then discover it had errors. Nothing major; just name spellings and addresses and an employer. (Logo Cruz?) But anyway, just do it. It might help you out in the long run. Some people estimate as many as 80% of credit reports have errors.


On an entirely different note, Matt and I leave for our honeymoon tomorrow! So probably no blogs for awhile. Unless something really exciting happens or we upload pictures. You know how I love my blog. I can't part with it or a computer for the honeymoon...

Mwah!

Wednesday, March 07, 2007

Interviews

"I'm not sure what to expect this year for my performance review. Last year it started with Michael asking me what my hopes and dreams were and ended with him telling me he could bench press 190 pounds. So..." ~Pam Beesley, The Office (not an exact quote).

Well anyway, the quote obviously doesn't have much to do with interviews, but I feel pretty much as baffled as Pam sounded about that review. (I've been bored and putting in Office discs and pushing 'play all.') Monday I had my phone interview for the AAAS secret plot which may or may not have been revealed yet. I can't remember. It lasted all of 10 minutes. And half of that involved the lady telling me the details of the program. So I answered questions for maybe 5 minutes. Were they all like that? Did I not blather enough? Who knows. From here on out, the sites fight over us, and then by April 16th they tell us if we got accepted and if so, where we are going. That is so long from now! I can't even handle it. And you know I can't.

This morning I had an interview at a local environmental planning firm. When I left, the receptionist told me it sounded like we were having a party in there. Good or bad? Not sure. The head honcho and two women were there. No one had any questions written down, nor did they write down anything I said. I spent half the time explaining to them what exactly it is that I do right now, even though it has absolutely nothing to do with the job for which I am applying. Then it turned out one of the ladies had gone to ASU and grew up in Michigan, so we talked about that for awhile, including the Thing. Of all things. And we talked about where I should live and how I would get there, and they joked that they could send the intern (I presume) to pick me up from the RailRunner station. And then they told me to keep them posted on my fellowship, even though I don't find anything out until April 16th. The head honcho said he is slow with decisions. So really I have no idea what happened. But as a bonus, the guy's wife is a writer/editor for Scientific American and UNM Press. Someone I should definitely get to know...

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

tikkun olam (healing the world)

Okay, so I got this off That is so Queer, which I found off of Crazy Aunt Purl, which Ms. A links to on her blog. I highly recommend both these blogs, as they are written by witty and insightful women. Anyway, back to the story at hand. Faith, of That is so Queer, works in HIV/AIDS, and she has done a few posts on tikkun olam, which is a Jewish word and principle involving doing your part to heal the world. She chose HIV/AIDS as her cause, and she trusts that other people will work on the other causes, like the war in Iraq, and environmentalism, and hopefully Darfur. Because obviously you can't spend significant amounts of time on more than one cause. She definitely does her part. And I, too, hope that someone is working on Darfur. Are they?

Today (before I read the other blog) I opened the spreadsheet that I keep of my donations to charities. Last year I donated to 12 different groups. (A few, like the Sierra Club, do not technically count as charities, because they are either political, or lost their 501c3 status, for whatever reason, that I mostly think sucks.) I think that I should narrow my focus and spend more money and time on 2-4 groups, rather than 12. I feel like this would make a bigger impact than my spontaneous donations to random groups triggered by the numerous mailings and phone calls I get, urging me to think of the poor children in Iraq... or some other equally endearing cause. Anyway, I am having trouble nailing it down, because even though I am a tried and true environmentalist, I do still worry about the Tibetans, and the Darfurians, and all the people subject to human rights abuses around the world, particularly women. Those are just a few of my favorite non-environmental causes. So anyway, if anyone knows of some fantastic charities that they think should be at the top of my list, please let me know.

But what I really wanted to write about was not my donations, but my work. Everyone knows that I have made environmentalism my pet cause. I love nature, so it is easy for me. Sometimes I feel bad about supporting environmental groups when there are so many other bad things going on in the world, but judging based on the charitable donations for the wedding, it seems that many people are more eager to support those other causes than the environment, and someone has to do it (so we have somewhere to live), so it might as well be me. Anyway, I always thought I would work for an environmental nonprofit, and do my part for tikkun olam. But I don't. I sit behind a computer and make water models. I can hope and tell myself it will help the environment, but that's just not true. It might help a few farmers or a few cities. That is all. So now as I sit at this crossroads, wondering what to do, I am back to considering the environment.

Does being an environmental planner (the job interview tomorrow) help the environment? Maybe. I can hope it does. I can tell myself that NEPA requirements and EIS help save something. But I think it is mostly bureaucracy. Would it be a relatively good thing to do before I find a more hard-core environmental job? Probably. It would give me experience. And those environmental organizations just don't favor Albuquerque for work locations. And if I don't feel like it is enough, I can spend more time volunteering for those environmental organizations. Or whatever organization. Because it is easy for me to send a check, but it is harder for me to send myself. Which they probably need equally.

Anyway, I had never heard of tikkun olam before, but I think it is great. Here is a link to her post of a few other Jewish concepts which really bear repeating.

Friday, March 02, 2007

Money

I realized it was silly for me to have money sitting in my Bank of America savings account making about 0.5% when it could be sitting in my ING savings account making 4.5%. So I tried to transfer money from my Bank of America savings account to my BofA checking account so that I could then transfer it to ING. No luck. Apparently BofA thinks it needs to help me save money but not letting me transfer it out of my savings account. At that point I realized that BofA is stupid and opened an ING Electric Orange account that will make 4% instead of 0%. That is a much better deal too. The downside is that there are no paper checks. You can bill pay online for free, send electronic checks, or have them send paper checks, but that might be difficult for quick turn-around-times or for sending people money unexpectedly. Therefore I think I still have to keep money in my BofA checking account for such instances. I am now trying to decide if I should change my direct deposit or just keep transferring funds. I wonder if it is bad for your credit to close multiple bank accounts in one year and open up a ton too. I hope not. I would be screwed. But I recommend ING to everyone. Great rates on everything from checking to CDs and more. (FDIC insured, but good rates because of no overhead.) See http://www.ingdirect.com

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Today

I made and ordered some Photobooks on Snapfish; one for me and one for my mother.

I ordered some prints from Smugmug.

I have compiled a cart at Gaiam, but have not purchased it yet. I have discovered that our new sheets do not match our old comforter, as I thought they would, so now I am making a foray into the world of eco-comforters and duvet covers. It is not a cheap world. I have also fallen in love with a $340 chair (also eco of course) and some rattan ottomons. Perhaps when we move and get rid of the old taped-together couches I will splurge on some new furniture.

Oh, I also spent a lot of money at the Container Store, in hopes that I can get my desk organized somehow. It is generally a hopeless venture.

I walked to my landlord's house to pay rent.

I mailed some things at the post office.

I got a job interview in Albuquerque next week! I specifically noted on my cover letter that I preferably did not want to start until August, but we will see what they have to say. It is a local environmental consulting firm and sounds interesting at first glance.

I made burritos for dinner. The green chile sauce is just not as spicy as it used to be. I am becoming a New Mexican.

Oh yeah, and I also worked.

I would say it was a productive (and expensive) day.