Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Beautiful Cabinets by Ron Standring



Dan and Ron finished installing the cabinets in record time, and they look beautiful! I keep walking downstairs just to look at them. The pantry is the real coup de gras, with drawers that pull out all the way. After putting everything away, there was still so much space that I brought in all the kitchen stuff from the garage.



Dan had fun installing the new microwave and stove (especially cutting a hole in the side of the house to install the vent for them!). Our first meal cooked on the new stove (I write this sheepishly) was fried egg sandwiches. They sure tasted good, though!




Here are the cabinets Ron built for us a while ago that face the new cabinets. Frank, our frog, enjoys the undercabinet lights nearly as much as we do!


Now our big dilemma is what material to use for a countertop. We're currently thinking of a solid surface like Silestone or granite, in a brown/tan color to contrast with the cream walls and maple cabinets. Here are two of our ideas. Which do you like better?

Kitchen Renovation


When we first visited our house - even before we put in a bid - Dan's amazing dad was designing new kitchen cabinets for us! A while ago, he built and installed a section of cabinets to add some storage to an empty wall in our kitchen. Beautiful!
In the past months, he has been busy at work again! Dan got to play the Incredible Hulk as he demolished our little pantry and old cabinets to make room for Ron's latest creation. My mom found a home in her garage for some of the cabinets, and the rest went to a charitable organization along with the old stove (THRILLED to be rid of that sticky, black mess!). The kitchen was quite a mess for a while, and it felt like we were moving when the dishes and pantry food were in boxes were all over our downstairs!
Dan helped his dad install the new maple pantry and cabinets along the western wall of our kitchen. Here is Dan preparing to attach the drawer guides for the pantry. Dan's dad installed them, creating a place for all the pantry items and many more things besides!









Pumpkin Train & Tucson Trip


On the weekend of Halloween, Dan and I went to visit my grandparents and Dan's family in Tucson, AZ. We stayed with my grandparents for a night, and viewed both the intriguing rock formations on Mount Lemmon and the nighttime Tucson skyline from A Mountain. Dan's oldest brother celebrated his 50th birthday with a bash at a Mexican restaurant. We chatted with the Standrings at the posh resort where we all had rooms, and then drove 13 hours with David, Diane, and the nephews to get home.




In October, we went on a neat old train ride with David, Diane, their boys, and Diane's family. We departed from Woodland on a crisp fall morning, and enjoyed hot drinks and cookies from plush chairs. We had the 6- or 7 passenger car train nearly to ourselves, and so we spent most of the ride running from the open-air car behind the engine to the windy caboose. Sharing the train ride with Ian, who LOVES trains, made the trip even more fun!



The engineer never took us much faster than 5 mph, so it wasn't too windy to really enjoy the countryside and rice fields. Mid-trip, they let us off to browse through a huge pumpkin patch and pick out our own pumpkin. Dan chose a pumpkin as big as my grin after I went through the haystack maze!




Wednesday, August 06, 2008

East Coast Trip


We are back from our trip to the East Coast. We had such a nice time visiting my Dad and family at his place in upstate New York! We arrived in Albany, NY, on Tuesday evening. We rented a car and arrived at my dad's house late that night, making it a very long day of traveling. My grandparents had arrived earlier in the day, and my uncles, aunt, and cousin arrived on Friday.
Dan and my Dad did a bunch of projects around the house on our first couple of days. They finished up some electrical work to illuminate the kitchen with some new recessed lights. The refrigerator was brought into the kitchen. They also made a few trips to the hardware store in Gilbertsville for supplies to install the new oven.


I asked Dan what he wanted for lunch today, and he said, "How about egg salad with lots of garlic?" HA! We had fun picking the rows of garlic and getting it ready to be dried, and once we had earplugs for the early morning, we were happy to have chickens and a rooster around. We ate delicious omlettes, egg salad sandwiches, french toast, scrambled eggs, hardboiled eggs...all with a healthy dose of garlic from the farm.


One cool event was watching my Dad play center in his hockey game. The county fair was another of the highlights of the trip. There is nothing like a funnel cake and a ferris wheel ride! We also enjoyed a hike around his property, watching him milk goats to make yogurt, and watching the new Batman movie with my Dad and grandparents. The country around his house is simply beautiful: lush, green, rolling hills that are filled with flowers and wildlife. The lack of billboards and stripmalls makes every road a "scenic vista."
After we left my Dad's place on Sunday, we drove out through Massachusets to visit Boston. We drove through the "Big Dig," a couple of tunnels and a bridge that Dan had seen built on TV. We walked around Deer Island, which was at one time a prison, a fort, and many other things, but now is home to a giant sewage treatment plant with egg-shaped buildings and a series of nice walking paths. Downwind was a little smelly! Following the little hike, we drove to meet Dan's brother Tom and his wife Bridget outside of Boston in Fort Devensone, one of the many little towns. We had a nice late dinner with them, and our waitress was kind enough to sneak a few ice cream sandwiches from the freezer for us since the other desert places were closed.
On Monday, Dan drove us to Walden Pond, which was beautiful but did not have quite the restful and quiet mood that I expected. It was swarming with swimmers! Still, we walked around the pond and saw the site where Thoreau lived. Later, we took the "T" mass transit system into Boston. We took a narrated tour of historic Boston in a trolley that went to many of the sites along the famous "Freedom Trail," and then walked through the Common gardens slurping on a refreshing Italian Ice. That evening we met up with Dan's friend Chris and his wife Amy. Chris is about to begin his second year at the Berklee School of Music, and Amy is supporting him by working at a real estate brokerage. We had dinner, walked along the Charles River, and ended our evening by having THE BEST frozen yogurt that exists on the planet at a place called "Berry Line" in Cambridge.
Tuesday was a whole day of travel....The nicest part was getting picked up at the airport by Dan's brother David and his 3 year old, Ian.

We had a lovely trip, and we're glad to be home with our big dog and cuddly cats!

Bounceopolis


Ian's Uncle Charles and Auntie Nova took Ian and Sarah on a Bounce House adventure after Nathan was born. It was amazingly fun, and strangely dangerous...a leak in the ceiling of Bounceopolis caused a ceiling tile to fall onto Sarah's shoulder!

Nathan Lucas Standring


Nathan is the newest addition to the Standring family. His royal cuteness sailed into the world on June 25th, 2008 at 3:23 pm. He is loved by all. Big Brother Ian says, "I love my baby!"