eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (Default)
Add MemoryShare This Entry
posted by [personal profile] eftychia at 07:37pm on 2004-01-27

Drove home today in freezing drizzle ... which wasn't too bad on I495 and I95 as long as people maintained non-scary following distances (which a surprising number of people did).

Got to my house, and my side of the street was off limits because of street-cleaning hours. Now I know darned well that the street sweeper isn't coming by when the curb lane has several inches of snow in it, but I don't know whether the ticket-writer will come and write the ticket anyhow -- reason says no, but this is a city government so I'm not sure reason is sufficient to determine the answer. But the other side of the street is posted "Snow Emergency Route" -- subject to towing during a snow emergency. I think I heard WTOP-AM say that Washington DC was in a state of snow emergency, but WTOP doesn't give that kind of information for Baltimore, being a Washington radio station. And the closest thing Baltimore has is WBAL-AM, mostly conservative talk radio, not news, but I thought they had traffic and weather a few times per hour. No dice: they were running an infomercial without interruptions.

So ... the same question I've wondered for the past few winters: how is one supposed to know whether a snow emergency has been declared? Other than by finding an expensive ticket on one's windshield or discovering that one's car has been towed, that is? (Last winter, during one storm, I asked a police officer whether a snow emergency had been declared. He looked startled and yelled to another officer, relaying my question. Neither of them had any idea, nor knew whom to ask.)

I came indoors to find a very hungry cat -- before I left I had put out a bowl with several servings of the food she likes and another bowl with several servings of donated food that she doesn't care for (but will eat if she gets hungry enough). The first bowl was empty, the second had been nibbled at, and Perrine was insisting that she was STARVING. (I fed her a normal amount. She ate that and has been bugging me for more food ever since. She can wait until her normal evening feeding, and if she's really that hungry in the meantime, there's perfectly edible, if non-preferred, food sitting out there for her.)

Then I noticed water dripping from the ceiling and went upstairs to investigate. I'm not sure why water was dripping unless Perrine learned to flush the toilet while I was away, but the toilet is not working. Running hot water into the sink eventually causes a backup via the bathtub drain. The kitchen sink drains just fine, as does the sing in the basement next to the washer, and the toilet in the basement flushes without backing up. I've gotten some advice for a couple of things to try. I'm not looking forward to cleaning parts of the kitchen with bleach yet again once I get this sorted out.

I was expecting a package via UPS. It had not arrived on Friday. Yesterday I checked the tracking page on the UPS web site, and saw that they'd attempted to deliver it and would make another attempt today. When I got home today there was a sticker on the front door from the first attempt (so much for the friends who tried to reach me by cell phone and failed, and decided not to ring the doorbell because if I wasn't home they didn't want to make that obvious to anyone watching). The sticker said "between 10:30 AM and 2:00 PM" today, so between all the other things I've been doing, every so often I reload the UPS page and see nothing at all for today on my package's track. Until five minutes ago, when an entry for today appeared: "5:35 PM BALTIMORE EMERGENCY CONDITIONS BEYOND UPS CONTROL". Uh, what's that mean, the UPS truck wound up in a snowbank or got a flat tire? A water main paved the UPS parking lot in a sheet of ice? Anyhow, I'm guessing the package will be rescheduled for tomorrow.

I'm trying to work up enough energy to brave the sleet and buy bread, milk, cooking oil, and sidewalk salt.

There are 12 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
cellio: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] cellio at 05:44pm on 2004-01-27
Baltimore has street-cleaning fines year-round? Wow. In Pittsburgh they suspend it for December through March, because we all know they aren't going to clean then anyway.

There ought to be some government office you can call to find out if there's a snow emergency. I'd call the mayor's office (or my council representative, if you have those) and ask whom to call in such situations. At least nominally they're supposed to serve their constituents, after all.
 

Re:

posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 07:25pm on 2004-01-29
Yup, the parking restrictions and the fines continue year-round, even through the time when we know we're not going to see the street-cleaner for a couple of months straight. :-(

(I think they might clean the streets in some of the wealthier neighbourhoods in the middle of winter, when weather permits. I'm not sure.)
 
posted by [identity profile] lilkender.livejournal.com at 08:43pm on 2004-01-27
You know cats always insist they are starving!
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 07:19am on 2004-01-28
Actually, my cats are pretty good about it. They know when they're entitled to be fed, and will eddy around my ankles and give me grievous meowls when it's time, but once fed, go their ways.

They *will* lie to my Best Beloved if he comes in a couple hours later, and try to convince him that I didn't Bestow the Holy Kibble, but they're not very good at it.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 08:00pm on 2004-01-29
The family cat when I was in high school had that down cold. She got three breakfasts a day until somebody wondered why we were going through cat food so quickly. We got up at different times, and she made sure to ask each of for food in turn. (I never fed her because I assumed somebody else did; I just didn't realize how many.)

It didn't work so well on weekends though.
 

Re:

posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 07:48pm on 2004-01-29
Yeah, the cat handbook starts with:

1. The cat is always hungry.
2. The cat lies.

 
posted by [identity profile] donnad.livejournal.com at 05:34am on 2004-01-28
Did I ever tell you the story of how one morning I woke up and found Keisha cowering in the corner of the kitchen staring at her food bowl across the room? I looked at where she was staring and found a mouse sitting in the cat food dish happily munching away on the cat food. Yes this cat is terrified of mice. This was in our other apartment, not where we are now. I have no idea how Lily would react to mice, but she is certainly interested in the birds in the tree outside.

But is it possible that mice got to Perrines food without her knowledge?
 

Re:

posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 07:54pm on 2004-01-29
It's possible that mice got into one stash of the food she doesn't like (the rest of it is in a glass jar and the good stuff is in a metal cannister). But she doesn't seem scared of mice -- she's quite good at catching them, and shows intense interest anywhere there's sight, sound, or scent of mose activity.

She's just not good at killing them. She gets overconfident while playing with them.
 
posted by (anonymous) at 07:12am on 2004-01-28
Nancy Lebovitz here:

I don't know if your place is chilly, but the cats here do eat more when it's cold. I don't think it gets below 66F indoors here, but that's enought to make a difference.

I haven't done exact measurements, but I get the impression that the cats eat close to twice as much food in the coldest weather compared to the hottest.
 
posted by [identity profile] anniemal.livejournal.com at 07:35am on 2004-01-28
Yes, they do. We have an outdoor cat with a bad attitude towards litter boxes, and now a bowel condition. He gets way more fodder than the inside cats. He also has a heated cathouse that gets checked often in cold weather. We've upped his rations and they're going eaten. In summer, it is about half.

I also think there's a response to short days that causes cats to try to pile on some insulation if they're allowed, even if the temperature where they are is constant. (stories omitted) Dogs'll do it too.
 
posted by [identity profile] dglenn.livejournal.com at 08:03pm on 2004-01-29
It did occur to me a few weeks ago to wonder whether Perrine would need to eat more to maintain her body temperature in such a chilly house, but I forgot to ask.

Links

January

SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
 
31