Lubeck rumble round

•May 24, 2008 • Leave a Comment
Stunnning town gate

Stunnning town gate

GO ahead and be jealous…my VERY generous hosts wanted to take me shopping this morn..so we walked westward from their little apt, and through some police lines (big soccer game today) to the…mall! Gasp… a morning at a typisch German grocery store and a pet shop getting a “third husband” for their little female canary.

Then on a hunch (it is my last whole day in Germany) I headed east, and across the Wakenitz river… I have spent all but two training in Kassel, a historically significant, seriously “erased” cultural center, owing to the munitions and rail connections.

Lubeck on the other hand, might have had some Allied music fans or something…it still has tons of bone jarring cobbled streets, dozens of copper spires…and precisely one Afro hair shop, where I spent a couple hours jiving politics with a friendly, and enthusiastically clueless (but creative) Zimbabwean woman…getting my tressed oiled and twisted.

lt good having her yank away at the jumbled mess that is my coiffure. Charlie, that church was a mind blower..it might be worth googling…it has stories galore…the one about the devil helping build it because he thought it was gonna be a tavern, and the one (true) about how bombing ruined the towers but the restoration uncovered painted walls from the 1500’s that had been whitewashed for centuries…wartime bonus!—————–took about a dozen pictures, there are also tons of Totentanz images…skeletons prancing about, must learn more…and the church is filled with tourists.

Meanwhile outside, slumped on the brick walled cloister sit a half dozen Goth punks withtheir black outfits, metal studded belts and pierced everything…and three of them were actually performing a spontaneous tongue piercing! – A little something extra to remember…when I emerged from Marienkirche, they were there,maybe one or two more…and the pudgy victim’s chin was thinly smeared with blood…

arrggghhhh

nice to be old, I tell you. My hairdresser had never dressed hair and a steady stream of drunken black men came through to use the toilet…it wasn’t a beaty shop per se, more of a place to get products, lotions, creams, emolients, beers from the secret stash, etc… She was a lovely woman, I mean it .

The streets are now (game long over) ringing with the bellowy roar of drunken youths… there are of course sirens now and then (fights)..but one of the strangest things is that it is perfectly legal to wander the streets drinking from a beer bottle. At least it seems strange to me, and must affect children in a negative way, eh?

Lost in Scramblation

•May 22, 2008 • 2 Comments

Pre-ride bike fix

Had a great ride today, despite a few factors that did not bode well.

As has been the pattern for the last week, i had no idea what we’d be doing that day. For a week I’ve been living without any wheat in my diet because Georges believes it’s poison. So I’ve been a bit hungry most of the time….this make me confused.

Plus, Angela, Georges’s girlfriend was leaving at dawn for Lubeck,  when I’d  expected she’d ride with us today.  But no.

So much for my insurance policy. Even though she is stronger than I, I have found her hovering when I am close to collapse. Without her, it would be just me and the boys.

Then I learned that she had taken the car because the trams were on holiday reduced schedule. This shouldn’t have meant a thing. but it put a wrench in the gears…which meant significant grumbling from Georges.

Ride time approached, we headed out, and it was obvious that the things in the car were crucial to the ride. And the car was…elswhere.  This meant going to the train station where the car was, and doing a rebuild of Geo’s bike on the sidewalk–changing the cassette on the rear wheel.

I amuse myself taking pix of the scary barbed wire like I have never seen  before, gnarly squarish razor stuff surrounding the government building nearby. ´

Dirk, George’s closest in age and ability, looks on and occasionally holds the wheel while Sidewalk Surgery is performed.  I perfect my track stand for the seventh day in a row.

Note to self: Car ownership not for those with a short attention span: if two people share them,  it is like a purse…there is always the chance the other has taken it when you need it.  And you forgot to mention that you needed the manicure kit. Or  helmet.  Or whatever.

As  usual this means more time for me to stretch my sore legs and let the Complexities work themselves out.

Our ride was to be with several young strong guys, among them the hotfoot Kolya and his friend the Hasel.  When we arrived spot on the appointed hour, no one else is there.

A flurry of phone calls reaffirm that nobody knows what is going on, or that Kolya has ADD since only a week ago, over lunch with four people he had agreed to ride on the following Thurs witih a certain Old Bat and Impossibly Strong Georges.

.

But we are strong; we ride anyway.

The trails are full of groups ranging from old couples to four and eight people with kids and dogs.

“What did you say the holiday was?” I ask George.

“Some Catholic holy day” he   shrugs. “It means the stores are closed in Hessen”

It is an overcast but mellow day.  And verily, every  ambulatory Teutonic family is out  enjoying a non shopping day.  The hills are green and the birds are singing their heads off.  At our first stop, Geo notices that his cassette is wobbly. A part is missing.

I have a strange breakfast in my stomach because the ritual Georges one (bananas, apples,  quark and oil) needs to be purchased each day fresh.  And today is (repeat after me) “a holy day”. Today I had sardines, eggs, oil and the dreaded bread. It was heavenly, moist thinly sliced rye with some Kochkase spread on it, their version of velveeta.

“Which holiday is the 22nd of May, anyway?° ´I repeat my earlier question… worded ever so slightly differently.  In German (at least that is what I think I am speaking).

George shrugs.

Please bear in mind that all the time the people around are speaking rapid fire German with no convenient subtitles….I am mostly clueless. Being clueless for an entire week can really do a number on a person. I can read German pretty well and can form my OWN mangled phrases and thoughts…but when these rocket fueled riders start a conversation I am left far, far behind, mulling over the first Interesting Verb I heard.

In short, I am used to being seen but somehow unheard.

After a bit, Dirk blurts an answer, happy as a quiz show contestant: “Happy Cadaver!”

“Huh?”

“Frohnleichnam” he replied. “Froh: happy….Leiche: cadaver..°

I remember Leiche meant corpse rather than cadaver.
“So, it is like day of the Dead” I think to myself.

I steer away from the blatant sign that this is to be my last day on Earth. Just because I haven’t heard of it, doesn’t mean it is a significant sign from above .

Besides, the overhead cloudscape is showering down fine fans of light that usually  promise a hopeful future in those tacky sci-fi movies.

note the rubber-sole chinese shoes!

Maybe it was the holiday, or maybe Germans are OK with sharing trails.

All the people we passed were cool.

I saw no scowls, and felt a sort of brazen gaiety in myself (as opposed to the regret  knowing that just by riding by, I have Ruined Someone’s Illusion that it is just them and Mother Nature) .  A freedom that I hadn’t breathed since I had ridden in Sweden two years prior. Where everyone in the woods just seems damned Happy To Be Outside.  Some smiled as we whizzed by.

I decided to greet the next group, and I carefully assembled my phrase. Since Guten Tag is how everyone says hello around here, I unfurled a “Guten FROHNleichnam!” in the direction of five people, two children and their elders strolling along ahead of us.

I got the puzzled look I have become familiar with. My accent might not be up to snuff. Or the word order is all wrong.
SHOENEN Frohnleichnam!” I repeat, emphasis changed.

A fixed look from everyone tells me I just said nonsense, which my companions confirmed as I asked them if this holiday was …er….celebrated like Valentine’s Day, or Christmas, or any other one where you say Happy whatever the hell to complete strangers.

Cyclists are by necessity bent over their bikes, but Dirk and Georges bent over even more as they hooed and hawed about “Happy Corpse Day” and the general effect it had on some unsuspecting family out on the second Thursday after Pentecost…(Pfingsten).

Georges und ich

4 tunes told for free

•May 21, 2008 • 2 Comments

The human life has its rhythms, its chord progressions, its melodic and discordant elements. A very familiar beginning and guaranteed end are shared by all, but no two are alike. The impossible uniqueness of the Music each human makes of their life is what makes me want to stick around.

Without having to think about it, I sort people I meet beginning with the original yes/no that means I will linger more than five minutes with him or her. I am now confident that it is because of my love of hearing an individual’s “music” and the fact that more players can mean more ….well, more beautiful interactions, unexpected outcomes, greater depth and complexity and yes, some incidental problem solving…particularly MINE, but mutuality gets double points.

My friends always add to my song (and I to theirs presumably) that –like birds– we are warbling insistently to the world.

I needed a long time to figure out what kind of so-called artist I am, very much thanks to the nudges and kicks of those Muses I find.

I never learned to paint, photograph or write. It used to bother me, but I just dive in anyway. And like dropping over a little lip into a rocky descent, I trust those leveled pedals. The bike is the gimbal that keeps me poised on a poisonous planet.

So here are four basic Themes currently rolling around in my head, loosened by travel. I KNOW I am going to make my “fortune” as a result of my prying myself off a rock and letting myself be the drifty, confused woman with the roiling interior life.

The four tunes are:

Love really does make the world go ’round.

Physical movement every day is essential to healthy hospitalproof living.

Accentuate your strengths.

And of course ride your bike.

Bicycles are the Perfect Conductor that actually weaves these all together.

I sit on the floor in a Kassel walk-up hotel that has been refurbed into a destination bar called Foster’s Garden. There is no chair, no desk… Just computers and wires and speakers and a pile of CDs, electric plug with six plastic piglets

An Australianish sort of bierstube with four other levels (billiards, music, sports on TV). I have never been in any. I just trudge up the six flights to the reassuringly cluttered halftime home of Georges Koch, who saw my story in the magazine (BIKE, from Germany)

The story can be read or seen anyway a few pages down on my photos…scanned article is at least lookable to you Anglphones. The title is “Tea Scares Away The Men” !

He wrote and said he had never seen HIS ideas in a bike mag.

He rides with soft soled kayaker shoes, five euros at the local discount store. He has a three speed internal hub that is combined with an 8 speed rear, three chainrings in the front….but the granny is a hard-to-find 20 tooth. And he has a VERY unusual diet. Which must be shared in Phelanfood at some point.

Now these are NOT my ideas, but the pictures he saw showed a nonconformist (drop bars, wack outfit) likely to be open to Other Ideas. So he wrote me an email and asked if I would like to trade places and for once be the beginner, and let HIM, a two year convert to the bicycle life, be the Expert. I love flipping things around. I wrote back “YES!”.

Georges sent for my precise bike set up. Charlie provided it (remember I only ride the bike, I don’t know the set up, the repair, etc)…and now I have the use of a nice silver bike which almost mimics my riding position, save the too-high b.b. which is endemic and seems unavoidable in modern massmade bikes.

I am riding it with soft shoes. My fuel is mostly quark (look it up, it’s not just a subatomic particle), oil and fruit, with doses of 90% cacao…I want to go on the record as having been in Germany and NOT eaten every single incredible pastry in the window.

I can do that after this Experimental Symphony.

For the moment, it is all just a different tune using a completely different set of intervals, a new scale. It will definitely be part of making my fortune, since it is entirely up to me to organize the libretto.

Oh yes, my German is improving, too.

Changing Countries

•May 15, 2008 • 3 Comments

I have only an hour or so before I drag my crap to the train station and hop on to a Basel bound train, switch trains to Basel bad something dorf, which lies just over the Grenze, in Deutschland.

God, I wish I could somehow put into words how simply hopping on a bike mellows me out, and the all-encompassing Novelty in my visual field so dazzles that it’s all I can do to just keep pedaling, and try not to drop into tram tracks.

the architecture
the gardens
the smells and sounds
it is like my heart is going to shatter
it feels like being in love with the world

but it probably is something more like a blend of panic, elation and relief to simply be turning the pedals and to be so good at it that I don ‘t even have to waste a second thinking ” I am gonna crash any second….” or “where am I?”.

It is a running conversation that I can never really remember (though the term Whimcycle came to me yest as I rolled across the Aare river on the way out of Bern and pointed into the morning sun)

“Note to self: google it, see if it is a cliche yet….”

Yesterday I saw a flickr photo of a woman perched on the bike, lllllooooonnnnng arms soft on the bars, competent and tres confident.

She is a native speaker (probalby learned very young). I learned late enough to have a great appreciation for the casual competence of a person who rode from infancy.

Me, I feel a bit like it is a second language, even though I äm fluent…

A nother tranquil day

•May 14, 2008 • 1 Comment


This first step in my two month trip has been to cement my ties to Favorite Family Members, the old ones–Po the ur-wombat expat and her partner Mo, the brothers V. and their wonderful families as well as develop the new ones (C. Schager and J. Herzog) that will see me into old age.

A recurring theme here in Switzerland (literally: “sweaty country”) is how often you see white haired people all over the place, walking (very slowly sometimes) mostly, though sometimes, well once anyway I saw a little motor-cart for nonwalking person.

“This would be a great place to grow old and and still get to be in the game” I told myself. “I don’t see people pounding the steering wheel in frustration”.

Of course there might be no better country than this for density of easily accessible public transit, and depth/variety of schedule options.

Verily it would be cool to putz around in the garden here…and I wouldna mind the snow I assure you…but the strangeness, the language, and about six other things (like having a perfect life in Fairfax) prevent that special mate from tearing up roots and moving.

Thus: this trip’s my gift to myself. I have barely unpacked it.

Greetings from a broad

•May 13, 2008 • 4 Comments

“Swiss people each have a tiny policeman inside them” said my friend, Francois V. who is a great cyclist and an impressive cartoonist-artist (his idea of a fun home movie was a fictional, improvised work that employed his two teen boys and his wife Micheline Ogi…a story called Le Vol (“The Theft”) that managed to touch on all the great themes… dishonesty, shame, karmic retribution, and social commentary …while being hilarious.

They spent three days making it, and even did an out-take loop –like all the comercial dvd’s have…and managed to just use up the battery (they were in Mallorca).

When I rode around the Three Lakes Tour (Lac de Neuchatel, Lac de Morat, and Lac de Bienne) we discussed a few things, hammering it into me that spontaneous lake plunges are not acceptable in this land …just as well… the water was about 5 degrees…pretty turquoise though. Very inviting.

Except for all those Swiss with their telephone, ready to either call the cops or just have their inner cop glare threateningly in my direction.

Funny. Disturbing the peace (silently) has been a sideline of mine, and I never really gave it much thought. Chree-Shtoff S. has put it to me in no uncertain terms. You either ask permission and cope with the answer or go ahead, and deal with the consequences of not asking in advance.

This has had an impressively inhibitory effect on my inner Flagrant Nyad.

Gonna see what the Germans think in a couple days.

Oh, you wnder about Switzerland, right? Well, Neuchatel seems to have been left off the Grand Tour, so this means cycle tourists can enjoy a garden-rich, bicycle friendly town–which is perched on a steep slope on a huge lake that lies like a blue mirror along a mountain range called the Jura.

The lake was once very big but some 19th century swiss engineers decided to end flooding and drained it, dammed it, canaled it (and along these canals are fine bicycle paths) and created more land (mostly public!) for museums and harbors and stuff.

Postcard from Europe

•May 13, 2008 • 3 Comments

Gréetings fröm Switzerland

This is a photo by Johanna Herzog…she is a cyclist and a social worker from Luzern Switzerland…for the last three days I have been riding with her, her friend “Cree-Schtoff” (Switzer Deutsch for Christoph) and their pals Vreni and Dany…there WILL BE A BLOG to come.

Too bad I lost those darling gluvs somewhere last night….they don’t make terrycloth ones any more, and darn it I spent at least four or five minutes sewing on that sunflower….

The club

•April 28, 2008 • 8 Comments

Nothing prepares you for joining the Crumpled Bike Club.

My class of four women, including a mom-daughter pair, was going well. We’d just completed the Wombat “Wimpy Track Stand” followed by a few good stabs at the in vivo version of ‘sur place’ (the very ol’ fashioned term I learned from Victor Vincente of America). There was some truly creative “Body English As a Second Language” phrases being thrown down under the valley oaks.

We were in a new ‘abusement park’ , since the usual environs was reverberating from the skilsawing ( the sound track to our mini building boom).

A corner of the horse-stable parking lot seemed ideal. Shady, and light traffic.

A humongous bruiser pickup truck pulled in, and came to a stop on the edge of my imaginary circus tent-circle.

“WE IN YOUR WAY?” I yelled, forgetting he wasn’t my student.

This stable is situated on public land, but it’s always good form to say something–anything— when dealing with horses and horse people. They always appreciate it.

He said, “no way. I’m in YOUR way… let me know if you need me to move”.
A big friendly guy. Wth a big frightening truck. The kind of truck where the grill is around shoulder level. He headed off to tame an appaloosa or shovel something.

“Right, now about those Bug Stomper moves!” I cried, returning to my suddenly adept ladies (happens every timeI turn my back). “No, that’s too dainty. Way too dainty…crush the bug!”

Half the fun of being the circus master/bike professor is making up inane skills names for the ‘sillybus’.

Then a quick demo (to an inner voice-over: “a vision in practical plaid wool –a unpleated miniskirt over grime-fighting black tights, another victory in the war against Lycra ..” it was a hot, very fine day and I was sweating big time,correcting tiny mistakes like a real old bat-larina. Then re-mount the bike, show it, tell it, throw it down, ad nauseum. Throat-roughening stuff.

Four women of varying skills make different kinds of noises from the honest-to-goddess beginner’s “whoops!” followed by a hasty “sorry..” to the regular rider’s familiar grunt that accompanies a move made, but only just.

Four voices yelled NOOOOOO! in unison, and i looked behind me (l’austin space, mixing fashion, crash-avoidance, and some attention on the task at hand)

The man in the blue truck had just started up his rig and driven on top of my beloved Breezer.

A shared bellow from five women as he backs quickly over the bike one more time, folding the handlebars in a most unpleasant way. The metal noise from forks and tubes crumpling brought out a bit of a neighborhood crowd.

I ran over as he jumped out, and we both stood there in shock. My Breezer looked well-ironed.

It was an accident he blurted.

I thought about how, just a few minutes earlier, I was crouched over the bike–equally out of view–putting my water bottle away.

And in a scary foreshadowy moment, I told Rupa that Indra had committed a cyclist faux pas: laying the bike down in the street. On the trail, I call this ‘Bike Shop In The Fire Road’.

Extra points if the bike is upside down, well-centered, and perpendicular to the ‘good’ line.

So is stopping on yr bike without pulling over…It’ a sign of good breeding (or coaching) to leave a clear path for the next person coming along. With six million people in the metro area, that means in the next minute or so…

“Here, I’ll pay you for it..” he said, reaching into his pocket.

“You can’t possibly have a thousand dollars in your pocket. Right now, it’s debris. I’ll have to carry it home. Let’s mull this over, maybe you can talk to your car insurer.” I said calmly, not betraying the heinous rotten illness developing in my gut. I had just noticed how the down tube resembled a toothpaste tube squeezed in the middle.  Handlebars both pointed the same direction.  This was my ride everyday, all-errands AND big distances bike. NOT a cruiser, NOT a commuter, NOT a racer. But all three.

Maybe my bike isn’t a thousand dollars. In 1995 it was two and a half thousand dollars. They aren’t made now… Well, here at Taj Mahovel people think bikes grow on trees (honestly, someone told me that, like Charlie lifts up some dirt and sprinkles it on some tubes and a bike emerges).

Stay tuned for part 2.

The joys of duplication

•April 25, 2008 • 3 Comments

En route to the DMV to get my duplicate “I-hate-driving license”, I passed a very likely dumpster (hmmm need photo) in Greenbrae, land of the totally silent suburban sidewalks, yards and houses. Between 9 and 3 pm this land is the sole territory of hispanic gentlemen like Joel Chavez, perfecting the already perfect topiary on the shrubbery.

Stepping on the saddle of the Breezer leaned against the box to get a good purchase on the lip of the huge orange metal box, I vaulted in, ,

First thing I saw was a restaurant caliber aluminum stock pot with its lid half-buried under some nice fluffy bathtowels.

Then: a fine white spaghetti strainer.

Conveniently close by, a lifetime supply of soba, vermicelli and even somehow damp but vacuum preserved fat wheat noodles, like albino worms on steroids.

I dug in, carefully avoiding the nails projecting from the 2x6s laying in among the towels, clothes, pots & pans…there were sample hoisin sauces, versions 1-5 of sesame oil, coconut milk, etc.. This person worked for or owned an all-natural asian convenience food company… and loved her faux chanel and vuitton bags (barely used, I want to write FAKE all over them but I doubt anyone would want to use them then…). A mysterious tiny wooden box with a jar of “Heaven grade Korean Red Ginseng”…unused, but very hard, like silica, to the touch. Old?

Wait’ll CC gets a load of that! It’s easily a $300/oz jar of the Good Stuff. Why so dear? Well, ginseng has “properties”.

Just as I was hoisting the last of the many cloth shopping sacks left in a bundle, I grazed a solid glass object with my metal shoe cleat.

Lo! A magnum of prosecco conegliano valdubbiadente ‘sogno di annibale’ (hannibal’s dream cheap white sparkly)

O, scoro mio….
Hauled these to DMV, got a license in no time (surprise!) and ran into dear neighbor Cam getting HER license….

“If I’d’a known you were coming, I’d have given you a ride!”
“Nah.. I like riding…”
Two minutes later I realize she could haul my “score-age”, and I could go back and get morage!

Of course she agreed to it. She’s read my story on gleaning..

Went back, the gardener was still there, and I tackled the clothing bags alongside the dumpster…this too was treasure. Three cashmere sweaters and the nicest mohair sweater with little soft curled turtle neck , I feel (and look) like an orangutan/yeti hybrid. Thing weighs nothing, warm as heck. Which means I’d work up a good sweat headeding home wearing all of them at once (why do you think they call them “sweaters”?!)

On the other hand, in the UK they are jumpers.

The gardener was admiring my agile diving in and out of the dumpster, so I put together a sack of noodles, sauce and some great towels and flower vases “for the little lady”.

As can happen, that comment elicits a visible inward wince.
But he said nothing…just admitted he wasn’t much of a chef, worked too much to cook, seven days a week, trying to ‘keep everyone hoppy”.

“But what about yrself? ” I asked reflexively. “Too much looking after others and not enough ‘selfish team’ leads to an ulcer”.

“Had one of those since I was thirteen”.

“How many kids you got?”
“FIve, plus a crazy old lady..”
“My husband has one of them too. Tough, eh?”

He didn’t grok.

At least he doesn’t have to work indoors. Or as he put it, all day at a boring hotel… I guess hotel maintenace is his alternative.

I pedaled home wishing I could fix the ulcer, but at least he knows he can have tea anytime he’s in our neck of the woods.

He sez he’s in Fairfax daily.

Before too long, I’ll be running a real Tea Room and a certain private citizen is going to uh…hmm.. can I get back to you on that?

At home, I have a message. Friend in SFPD has my wallet (and I assume my license). Guess I can keep one in the car, like I always try to (but the photocopy would probably not impress a cop) since Purse Carrying isn’ t a natural instinct and I often drive without money or identification.

Such a brat.

“Shittyness Will Not Be Tolerated”

•April 23, 2008 • Leave a Comment

Handle guaranteed never to melt

Soap dispenser that can’t be knocked off sink, and which drains into basin

broke the handle of your beloved Portmeierion cup? Just ask the Shittyness Containment Professional to put on an aluminum handle with silicone, and use until…it fails (hasn’t in 5 years).

Most businesses make much of “striving for excellence.” Here at Cunningham Applied Tech, we’re happy just to “abolish shittyness”.

American shoppers are quite accustomed to buying junky stuff. They haven’t much choice, having long ago decided that (quantifiable) price matters much more than (hard to quantify) quality. We at the Hovel chafe at the idea of bringing home crap that is, even when new, full of shortcomings.

We recoil.

Flaws in design aggravate tje in-house engineer, even as they make me smile.

It’s comforting to know that Others, especially Manufacturers, are as Inept as I am.

But life is a little tougher for the Engineer. Nothing ever seems to be done “right”.

And so our tool-wielding wizard disappears into his atelier with the offending item for ‘mollification[‘(sic).

In a matter of minutes (or hours) the Stuff returns to service VASTLY IMPROVED.

We get a little buzz of satisfaction each time we use it for the remainder of the life of the item.

I.e. ‘forever

A soap dish is a perfect example. The old one was a plastic dish that was regularly knocked onto the tile floor. Jarring.

It lacked the necessary draining screen so the soap dissolved… (is there collusion between soap makers and soap dish makers?)

And finally the thing melted when we were drying it a little too near the wood stove.

I can always tell when the mollifying process is underway. I hear sounds resembling a rodent’s gnawing …it’s the engineer abolishing one shitty little thing after another on the other side of the living room wall.

A couple hours of filing, grinding and tin-snipping slip past (to She the Destroyer, this is a long time. To the Fixer, it’s a just heartbeat).

Result: a new, better soap dish. Fabb’d from a hoard of stainless steel deli equipment I’d brought home the previous winter.

Excess water dribbles back into the sink now.
Soap remains aloof, above mere “puddles”… also lasts longer.

It’s permanent….won’t melt when drying on the cast iron stove.

Another example.

A clunky but much-beloved coffee cup broke ten years ago, and since CC knew how I loved both Portmeirion pottery and cyclamens, he fixed it in the usual mixed-media mate-mollifying way.

As for the ever-singed bakelite pot handle? Away with it, in its place a stout iron spring, and a welded loop of metal that allows the pot to be suspended until completely dry.

Meanwhile on the packrat front, all this gleaning means a certain amount of culling must happen.

To make room for the blender (which has to live next to the old blender–until I can COMPARE QUALITY) I must relocate a lovely line of jars full of beans.

“I wouldn’t touch those things anyway. Too old.” Charlie mutters.

“Has-beans!” I say, faux-brightly, dreading the thought of jeettisoning six types of heirloom beans.
“I guess they have seen better days” I concede.

“You mean better decades“.