Port AFTER a storm

Had to get my car’s inspection, oil change, and registration renewal this week. I can’t believe I’ve had this car a year. For the first time, I was able to park in the carport.

The last time I parked a car in that space, in August of 2017, Harvey drowned it. Since then, the carport was filled with flood-destroyed furniture and other possessions, then construction materials like plywood, tile, paint, lumber, interior and exterior replacement doors, replacement appliances–and in between, large piles of construction debris that our contractors had to periodically haul to the landfill.

There are still windows to be installed on the house as you can see, but there’s plenty of room for my car. I can’t even remember what I named her. I think Graycie. Maybe one day my brain will be back in full operational mode.

looks exactly as I wanted it to–WOOHOO!

Coming soon–MY OFFICE! These were taken over a few days.

Ready?

So ready.

How do you like it so far?

I don’t like it at all. I LOVE IT. I NEED ALL THE OFFICE SPACE!

Not so fast. Has to be grouted.

And now?

Get out of here, Pollock, you freak.

But these colors perfectly set off my sleek black coat! I shall pose here.

First piece of flood-surviving furniture to be moved into the newly remodeled space.

We’re very busy here. Tom needs us bad.

Yep. Just what I wanted.

Time to bring the boxes home and start loading the shelves.

The set of drawers below was the first thing we bought for our home post-Harvey. We weren’t supposed to buy anything! But when Tom and Tim went to find replacement chests-of-drawers for Tim, Tim saw it, sent me a photo, and I immediately texted Tom and said, BRING THAT TO ME. It looks very nice under my sweet bovine friend. She’s going to watch over me while I work when I officially get to reclaim my office space. Though the black plastic screams, “You can hide the bodies in the trunk!” it will be gone soon enough.

Tim bought this couch to replace his drowned sectional. But it’s not tough enough to withstand his big dogs, so we’re taking it to replace the one that was on the craft room side of the office. The pillows are all stacked up to keep the littles off after some cleaning and Scotchgard™ing.

“Keep the what off now?” Anime asks.

Y’ALL–around 1 year, 1 month, and 1 week later, I HAVE A BACK ROOM AGAIN!

Wayback Wednesday?

They were safe during the flood, stashed in old shoeboxes on the upper shelf of a closet. Out of sight, out of mind saved them.

My old 45 records. When the bin came home from storage that they’d been put in as we cleared the house, I decided they needed a really solid and classy case of some kind, befitting vintage survivors of the storm. I found these online–mostly used by deejays and musicians and collectors of rarities, I suspect, but my records are just as special to me. There are a LOT of good memories etched into that vinyl along with the music.


Their new home to be.


Ready for sorting.


When it comes to band names, the alphabet is hard.


Little Eva Destruction (that’s what Tim calls her, so it’s her new DJ name) our foster dog says, “What can I spin for you?”
Wouldn’t it be funny if you asked and I had it. No, Marika, I DON’T have that. Not on 45, anyway.

last look

One final look at the room in this state, because this week, the tile will be laid. I can’t wait to see it and share it!

Those little brown square-ish things above the brick are the built-in stereo speakers from the former owner. Everything still works and is connected to our stereo in another room, and our contractors are making new covers for them.

Closer…

For some reason, I don’t really have a lot of exterior photos of the back of Houndstooth Hall. This is one of the first photos I ever took inside the back room (office/craft room) the day we moved into the house. The room still had a sliding glass door then. And a Margot and a Guinness 😢, pictured sleeping here with Anime and Tim’s Pollock.

Maybe a year after our move, we had the French doors put in. You can see those doors in this post-Harvey photo the day the dogs were able to come home after the new fence was put up.

Now this is where we are. Still some work to do, but so much closer.

Drowned Poetry

Almost a year ago, I posted about dreading taking on this task. When we took a photo of this closet in the middle bedroom after the flood water was out of the house, it didn’t seem so bad.


Ha. That door has been replaced. That floor was replaced. The lower walls of the closet had to be replaced and repainted, along with all the woodwork in and around the closet and that entire room. That Dyson was dead thanks to water damage. And that’s where the bag with all my Magnetic Poetry stuff was–and it had water in it. A month after the flood, as referenced in the above linked post, I knew I was going to have to tackle cleaning it, but I just didn’t have the energy to do that in light of all the other things I was doing day in and day out.

The bag got stuck on a lower bookshelf in the library, where I had to see it every day and know I wasn’t doing anything to fix it.


You can see it in this picture behind Jack, taunting me.

A few weeks ago, I bought some plastic containers so when I did take on the job, I’d be able to organize. Those containers were then stuck in the middle bedroom where everything goes to be out of sight and wait for the house to be finished so it can be moved to its eventual destination.

I decided today was the day.

First, opening that bag, being confronted by the odor, and figuring out what could be saved and what was lost.


Anything that had any kind of paper was not salvageable. Even if it looks okay in the below pictures, it was stuck together, misshapen, and it smelled. So goodbye entertaining and original boxes.

Magnetic Poetry: The Game was the worst. The plastic inset had protected its metal container, but the paper stuff inside was still wet and covered in mildew. It was completely disgusting.

Cleaned and saved:

This little container had some rust, but I cleaned it and all its words, dropped a couple of breath mints in with the words, and I hope it’ll be okay.

Most of the words had long been divided into multiple plastic containers. Some of those never took water and were okay. Some had to be thrown away. I lost a whole set of gay-themed magnetic words I bought in San Francisco in 1998. That set is no longer manufactured, and I’ll miss it and some of the words unique to its era.

All of the surviving Magnetic Poetry words were separated and given baths in my kitchen sink. Hundreds and hundreds of words, a box at a time, were cleaned and dried and put into new containers. This took all day long as I worked on it while I was also doing my rescue job. Whenever there was a work lull, I went back to the kitchen. Lynne was here cooking a pork roast in the crock pot. She cleaned the house while I was doing all this other stuff, cooked our dinner, ushered dogs in and out all day, and loaded the dishwasher after dinner. It was a rainy, humid day, so apparently even housework was better than trying to do anything outside. I’m eternally in her debt for taking over the care of the Hall and the Hounds for the day.

Too bad I didn’t take photos of all those words laid out in the sink or drying on towels. Photography wasn’t part of the cleaning routine. By the end of the day, this was everything that was safe, all cleaned and dry.

What I couldn’t save were the personalized sets of magnetic words that were made for me by Marika (Twilight-themed) and Rob E (Becky-themed). The paper on those magnetic sheets was ruined by water. I’d also been given a colorful set of magnetic words by our friend John that an author signing at Murder By The Book had handed out at her event. Those are the ones in the third photo above, stuck to my metal box. That box… Well, I’ve cleaned it, but it looks pretty bad, and I haven’t put any of the word collections inside it. It may remain just a decorative reminder of the day Harvey tried to drown all the poetry.

As if…


This is my message to everyone struggling after Hurricane Florence. I deeply hope that you get the kind of help that was given to Texas and Texans. I wish that same level of help had been given to Puerto Rico after Hurricane Maria. (That is not to disparage the people and organizations who are helping there and have been for a year. You are an inspiration and a gift.)

I wish all the survivors and rescuers, human and animal, the best from the bottom of my heart.

Like love, like hope, like help, as with all art, there will always be poetry.

Painter

Yesterday was my father’s birth date, and I thought of him as I was shooting these photos of the progress in the office. Every time we moved–and there were many–pretty much the first thing my mother did was choose paint colors to make a place “ours.” I have so many mental pictures of my father on ladders in all our houses making her vision a reality.

We’re sticking with the same neutral in this room that we used in the rest of the living areas of the house. That normally wouldn’t be my thing–this will be my work and creative space, after all–but I think eventually when you see the floor tile and the furniture, you’ll agree with our decision.