Felt like a zombie much of the past few days, except while
sneezing. Dunno whether zombies sneeze, but it just felt like
a kinda unzombieish thing. Do zombies sneeze? Felt somewhat
better part of yesterday, but no stamina. Slept a lot Tuesday,
was so out of it Wednesday that on Thursday I couldn't remember
having taken out the trash (but deduced from empty garbage can
that I must have). Now have been awake all night despite
feeling groggy the whole time; hoping to manage a few hours
but not completely screw my chances of sleeping properly
tonight or making it to a rehearsal this evening. (Gonna
prioritize sleep over rehearsal if it comes to that.)
I'd thought that the zombification was either the randomness
of fibromyalgia or a reaction to a medication change, but then
I drank something cold and it made two spots high up on either
side of my throat hurt, and it finally dawned on me that the
extreme sleeping and disorientation might result from a virus
or something instead. Throat's feeling better now.
The past two mornings Perrine and I have heard
this bird, which apparently hangs out in the vines clinging
to the house outside the office, but I haven't spotted it
yet. Standing in the office, it sounds as though the bird
is inside the wall. [This recording was made (on a
digital pocket dictation-grade recorder using only it's wee
built-in mic) standing in the office with all the windows
closed -- I've got other clips, but the ones leaning out a
window have way, way more background noise; you can hear
other bird species, but what would otherwise be background
hiss is, alas, in the foreground on those, even when individual
cars can't be distinguished. (Peak birdsong time seems to
also be peak morning traffic-noise time.) I did apply a little
noise reduction in Audacity, which introduced a little more
squeak on the highest pitch and other more subtle artifacts,
but this is pretty close to what my naked ears heard.]
The sound does seem to be coming through the wall more than
through a window, and there's a dense clump of vine in the
right spot. Leaning out the 3rd-floor back window, my ears
give me the same location, just softer due to increased
distance ... leaning out the window I can also hear others
of the same species on the other side of the house just west
of mine, and two or four doors east of my house as well.
(All three that I've heard so far seem to be in the gaps
between alternating pairs of houses[1]).
When I played back yesterday's recordings to edit them
today, Perrine's ears moved when she heard the tweeting and
chirping birds, but her whole head and then her whole body
moved to try to find this bird when I got to the recordings
that included it. She stared at the window (I guess she
knows that whatever directional hearing tells her is the
source of the sound, birds are found outside windows ...
or the fan I've got blowing into a computer (because
its CPU fan croaked) and echoes in the bedroom are
enough to confuse her ears. She wound up stalking out to
find another window to look out of for the bird. She's
really interested in this one.
She's also, of course, interested in any that she can
actually see. I'd wondered whether her frequently begging
me to turn the water on in the bathroom was because she
was thirsty or bored, and I think I have an answer, because
she's been asking for that a lot less since the couple of
days warm enough to open the bathroom window for a few hours and
let her watch the birds on the porch roof and the
tree in the back yard[2].
Now she's asking me to open the window again. Somewhere
after the bathroom sink, where I can't see it (so probably
after the drainpipe enters the bathroom floor) there is a
leak that spills out onto that roof (I only see it when
water is going down the sink drain, not when I run the
shower[3] or flush the toilet), and birds come to sip from
that when it's not soapy, and this week to splash around
and bathe in it, as well. While I'm not thrilled about
having a mysterious leak, I do agree with Perrine that the
bird-attracting aspect of it is nice. Watching her hunch
down and tense up, ears and whiskers forward ... well,
even though I know that what I'm observing are the instincts
of a killer (and a pretty effective species of killers
at that), there's still something adorable about it that
gives my heart happy melting sensations. And I like watching
the birds myself. Unfortunately the fixed security screen
cuts down on contrast and sharpness when I shoot photos
through it, but oh well.
I should have a trash can with a lid for outside soon.
The neighbourhood association put something in the most
recent newsletter about having arranged a deal for a
discount on garbage bins at a local hardware store (as in
small, eighbourhood store, not the nearest big-box store),
and mentioned additional assistance for residents hard up
for cash. I emailed saying, "yes, please," and they're
giing me one, with the neighbourhood logo and my house
number stenciled on it. To be honest, I'm not really
looking forward to using it (being too broke to afford a
new one made a handy excuse) but I know that I ought to.
It's less an aesthetic issue than a rat-control one, and
the neighbourhood association and the city both seem to
be making a new push for closed cans. Interestingly,
the rats don't seem to be interested in my
garbage even when I see them tearing open other folks'
trash -- I don't know whether that has to do with my being
a vegetarian, or what -- but if we were ever to reach
100%-except-for-Glenn trash-can law compliance, I'm
sure the rats would go after my trash bags as the only
ones available.
Using a sturdy can with a tight lid has been the
law longer than I've been here, and I did try to
comply at first, even though failing to dash right
out to scoop up the empty trash can and drag it back inside
within the first few minutes after the garbage was collected
usually meant somebody else's trash would get dumped in
my garbage can before I could bring it back in. I had
to paint my house number on the can because it got
swiped a coupe of times and the wind took it a few
more times. But then somebody stole the lid, and
shortly after that I got an expensive ticket for not
having a lid. Since I never quite had the spare cash
for a new one, I went back to just putting my trash
out in bags, canless, like most of my block has been
doing, and since the bags don't have my house number
on them, I haven't gotten any more tickets. (Perverse
incentive, eh?) So soon I'll be Doing The Right Thing
again, but it's going to be a PITA...
I usually only have one kitchen-size bag of trash
(pickup is twice a week, though there's talk of cutting
it to once), and carrying that out through the narrow
and cluttered path through my house isn't too bad.
Most outdoor garbage cans are larger, and more effort
to get through the house. (Even if I move the guitars
out of the front hallway, that hall will still be narrow
enough to be annoying, if the trash can I'm getting is the
same size as the old metal one.) And I've been told that
we're not allowed to store them in front of the house,
so I can't just tuck it next to the steps and move
it to the curb and back on trash days (I has
this idea of chaining it in place and putting a lock
on it, and removing those on tradh days) --
I'll need to carry it the entire length of the house to
put it on the back porch ... which means rearranging the
kitchen, because right now there's no way to get
something that size to the back door; and it means
twice as many trips carrying a bulky can than I've
been making with a usually 2/3-full bag, 'cause I
have to bring it back; and I don't know how often
I'l be carrying it back in not-empty because
a sneaky neighbour or (more likely) some pedestrian
or motorist passing through decides to refill my
garbage can after the garbage collectors empty it
(things might have changed, but the pattern a few
years ago when I was using a metal trash can was
that there were very few days when I managed to
get the can back still empty, and sometimes it was
so full there was no room left for my own trash!).
It's a much larger increase in the amount of effort
involved in taking out the garbage than it sounds
like, especially on days when my body isn't working
well. But the city (like, uh, most cities, AFAIK)
does have a rat problem. And the city is making
noises about stepping up enforcement of trash fines.
Bleah.
Speaking of fines -- I got a letter (addressed
to my mother, the property owner) saying I've got
a few weeks to get the window frames on the front
of the house replaced. Aiieeee! No idea what that'll
cost, or whether Mom can afford it (I certainly can't),
or what permits are needed (according to
the letter, I have to apply for permission to do
city-mandated work!!). Now I do need
new windows (I didn't think the frames needed replacing
but the sashes certainly do -- I've mentioned that
they're falling apart, letting the glass shift, and
letting cold air in (mostly plugged with caulk now...)),
and would love to have something more energy-efficient,
but I'd really hoped to do it at a time financially
convenient for me or Mom, not on a tight deadline.
(*worry*) Mom hasn't answered the email I sent her
about this yet. They're threatening $500/day fines
if we miss the deadline. I wonder whether there's
some sort of city home-improvement grant that I
qualify for ... er, except that it's probably my
mother who would need to qualify.
And y'know, I've blathered on this long and only
hit one of the topics that I've been meaning to write
about these past few days when I've been too zombified
to think long enough. Whoops. Well, if I have enough
alertness today, maybe later. We'll see.
[1] The 3-story front of each house shares walls
with neighbours on either side; the 2-story back of each
house shares a wall with one neighbour and has a space on
the other side, thus:
The red splotches represent
where the bird calls sound like they're coming from,
except that the leftmost (easternmost -- north is down
(sorry)) may be two doors farther away, as I'm not getting
as certain an idea of the distance for that one.
[2] The tree that I at first thought was just
a rather tall weed with a woody stem that I should get
around to cutting down sooner or later ... until I didn't
look out back for a couple months straight and when I
looked again it turned out to have become a tree.
[3] Which I still need to get around to repairing
so I can go back to using the tap in the tub to turn the hot
water on and off, instead of using the service cutoff next to
the floor and having to prop a bucket under a leaky fitting when
the hot water is running. Still waiting for an enough-spoons
day to take it apart and run out to a hardware store with the
hose that has a leaky fitting, and say, "do y'all have one
of these?"