Wednesday, January 21, 2009

A Little Color


Last weekend I was able to begin painting the walls in the Tower House Kitchen. Yellow walls and white trim are traditional kitchen colors for us. As I work around the room I am having to do wall and woodwork repair and caulk cracks. So far it is turning out pretty well. The room's light fixture was a big dark tubular chandelier, vaguely colonial looking, which I replaced with the deco style fixture pictured.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Cheetah Cub











Lee Ann and Annie visited their friend, Cathryn Hilker, on Sunday along with the other folks who work at the Tack Trunk. Cathryn is very involved with cheetah conservation and has worked for many years with the Cincinnati Zoo's programs. She raises and trains cheetahs to be ambassadors to build awareness among school and community groups about threats to the survival of the species.

Right now Cathryn has an 11 week old cub, and the Tack Trunk group got to spend the evening playing with him. Lee Ann and Annie report that this was the coolest thing ever!

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Kitchen Floor Tile - Tower House




This week we went from raw plywood underlayment to a tiled surface in the kitchen at the Tower House. These are 12" square vinyl tiles, the old-fashioned kind that you have to wax. We have the same tile (same colors and everything) in our current kitchen.
Our plan is to have a 1930-looking kitchen. We have an old Chambers white enamel gas range on legs and a matching icebox to go in here when the room is ready. I also have some salvage wood cabinet doors, drawers and cabinet fronts which are about the right period. I'm still looking for the right kitchen sink.
For this room it took just about 200 tiles and about 10 hours over two days at my typical snail's pace to lay them. Glad that's done!

Friday, January 2, 2009

Bike Trail


We take a lot of walks, sometimes to walk dog Danny and sometimes just because we like to walk. There is a bike trail that loops through Lebanon and passes a few hundred feet behind our house. Here is Lee Ann with Danny, during our walk on the trail earlier today. At this spot there is a nice view of the river and woods.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Our Busy 2008

On New Year's Eve, we McAlpines sit together and recap that year's events. This is easy because I have a spiral-bound work calendar and (almost) every day I compulsively write two or three sentences to say what was going on in our lives. I have kept this diary-like record for at least ten years but Dec 31 2007 (a year ago) was the first time I did the end-of-year recap with the family. Now we have done it twice, and I think that qualifies it as a tradition.

Here is a summary of our 2008:

January - We find a buyer for our house (the one we are living in), rather unexpectedly, and agree to get a number of things fixed and sell by June 1. Basement wall fixing/waterproofing, electrical repairs and kitchen/bath finish work ensue. I finalize plans to retire from DJJ on April 1. Lee Ann buys a new horse, Ruler, in Springfield, which brings her total to three horses.

February - My retirement is announced, but a few days later a bigger announcement - my company is acquired by Nucor Steel and rapid expansion looms. I agree to stay on until May. Meanwhile, our potential house buyers announce they must take possession by April 15. We accelerate house fixing and begin to move furniture and belongings to the Tower House. Lee Ann began working a grueling full-time job as barn manager at her horse barn and Annie gears up for her first lacrosse season at Lebanon. Boy are we busy.

March - After our house buyers twist our arm for faster closing and possession and other concessions, and half our stuff is moved, the deal falls through - we are more relieved than anything. My replacement at DJJ, Terry, is announced and we begin crosstraining. Ruler comes up lame and the vet says he needs four months stall rest (this eventually stretches to eight).

April - Annie's Lacrosse season begins. Her team will go on to have a good first season with a winning record, and with Annie playing almost every minute in goal. I am traveling frequently to Kansas City to support DJJ's large expansion there. My replacement assumes his duties, but there is so much to do that I arrange to continue on as a part-timer for the near future - so my retirement is off. (This was very lucky as things turned out, and now I am glad to be working and not drawing down my much-diminished 401K funds for living expenses.) Annie turns 16 - funny, it seems like she just got here.

May - Annie passes her driver's test and gets her license! A few days later she and I drive to Andrews School near Cleveland, where she attended half of ninth grade, for a weekend visit. For us that's a pretty big adventure. Annie finishes off 10th grade.

June - My DJJ schedule reduces to 80%, or four days a week. I am working on plumbing at the Tower House, the basement entry and cover at the Lebanon house and wiring at Lee Ann's barn. Annie has had a job at The Tack Trunk since the fall, but now adds a second job at Whit's Frozen Custard. They love her there, of course. Lee Ann sells her horse Chocolate, which leaves her with two. Lee Ann and I celebrate 17 years of wedded bliss.

July - Annie takes two summer vacation trips, lucky kid - first to Phoenix to visit her"aunt" Jana, then to New York City for a perfectly touristy week with brother Brian and family. Lee Ann and I have a b& b weekend to ourselves in historic Harrodsburg, KY.

August - I am working on Tower House floor repairs and stripping woodwork. Lee Ann's barn job ends, but it was very hard work and she needs a break anyway. My DJJ schedule reduces to 60%, or three day weeks - a very comfortable pace! Lee Ann drives to Michigan to visit her friend Nancy W. for a weekend, and in her absence I tear off our back porch at the Lebanon house and begin rebuilding it. Annie gets her ears pierced - an event I have dreaded since she was born. (I still can hardly look at her earlobes!)

September - Lee Ann begins a new job - at the Tack Trunk. She loves the work there. I pick away at the back porch rebuild all month. Annie starts in on 11th grade. Her schedule with two jobs and a very demanding honors curriculum is grueling. The scrap industry is faltering noticeably, which is bad news for DJJ.

October - DJJ acquisitions cease due to the economic crash, but I am still busy doing safety training on my part-time schedule. One day, on a whim, I bake cream puffs. Someone breaks into the tower house and steals my generators - bummer. I finish major work on the back porch project, finally. I get a call from Georgetown - the building inspector there wants the dilapidated frame addition in back of the pharmacy building we own there torn off, so I begin demolition. Lee Ann is riding Ruler again, gingerly.

November - We finish the Georgetown teardown. I do porch finish work in Lebanon. Lee Ann and I put up a fence and gate across the front of the Tower House property, to hopefully deter thievery. At Annie's suggestion, we volunteer to help tear down an unwanted house at Highlands Nature Sanctuary, which turns into a pretty fun day. Mom visits for Thanksgiving week. We have a good time with her, and with Brian and Lorrie when they spend a day here.

December - DJJ lays off 10% of Cincinnati staff. I am not among them, but in using up accumulated vacation time I am off work for most of the month. Annie takes the SAT and ACT exams for college entrance (she is just 20 months away from college!). I begin working on the Tower House kitchen, prepping the floor for new tile. We have a happy pre-Christmas visit to Brian's in Jackson, and a nice quiet Christmas day at home. I buy a 2008 Chevy Colorado - our truck for the future.

Old And New


We are having a pretty Happy New Year so far and hope you are too.

Here is a nice New Years' parallel to that classic image of the dusty old codger stepping aside for the bouncing new baby - but with pickup trucks.


I bought my Dodge Dakota in June 1996. It has been a reliable truck that has taken us where we wanted to go and hauled a lot of our stuff besides. But it has 170,000 miles on it and I had been thinking about replacing it. It turns out that right now car dealers really, really want to move their inventory. On Tuesday I bought a 2008 (new) Chevy Colorado at a discounted price. This is a basic truck with a 4-cylinder engine, two-wheel drive and manual shift - just like the Dakota.


I am a fairly brand-loyal guy and intended to get another Dakota, but learned that Dodge does not make them with a standard cab anymore. Then I found the Colorado, which is a midsize truck like the Dakota but does have a standard cab version. The fire-engine red was luck of the draw, but I like it. Maybe I'll start to get speeding tickets now.