Monday, June 11, 2012

Monday morning, coming down

I'm not really talking about me, although I'm certainly not quite as high up on that cloud of excitement and empowerment I was on Saturday after scolding a U.S. Senator.

My husband is still shaking his head over that one.

I'll post the photoadayJune picture (how serendipitous is it that today's prompt is "door"?) as soon as I publish this post so you can see what I'm talking about.

I came out into the living room this morning and noticed one of the sliding glass door panels was completely shattered. I looked for a brick or a rock on the patio, but found nothing. Then – of course! – I Googled and learned that spontaneous shattering of tempered glass sometimes just happens.

What a bitch.

As I sit here at my dining room table, the door is behind me and I can hear it. It's literally creaking. The spider-vein cracks are probably still spreading, although I can't see them do so, as when a car windshield cracks.

I've called the hardware store, gotten a couple numbers (an Andersen window representative and an installer) and am waiting for the somewhat civilized hour of 8 a.m. to call the first one, who will need to inspect it and tell us what to order.

Nothing like reality to bring you back to reality.

And nothing like the threat of rain to get you outside, weeding the herb bed and spreading the rest of a truckload of mulch. I got the landscape bed mulched last night after dinner and there truly is something magical about a freshly mulched flower bed. It's just lovely – so neat and tidy and professional-looking. I'm hoping the herb bed will look just as awesome – even though it's filled with quite a hodgepodge of plants, not all of which are herbs – when I finish it.

As both of you already know, the herb bed is circular and sliced into wedges, like a pie. I'm going to use dark mulch on the slices and crushed coconut shell mulch on the paths between the slices. I think it will look pretty enough for a picture.

When I was out there last night working on the weeds, I found four volunteer tomato plants. I'm leaving them there – free food! – and thankful I feel no need to make this herb bed a showpiece. Heh.

4 comments:

denise said...

I was once at an ATM machine outside a bank - it was around 1:00 on a Saturday afternoon - just after the bank closed, so there were several of us slackers waiting to use the machine.

Suddenly, there was a loud POP and when we looked around we realized that the back window on the car that was being displayed outside the bank (some kind of ad for car financing or maybe a sweepstakes, don't remember) had completely and spontaneously shattered just like your house window!

We all looked around thinking someone had done it but there wasn't anyone around. One of the guys in line said that can happen like that and having the car sitting with all of the windows sealed up tight and sitting in the full sun day in and day out might have caused it. But it was sure crazy to see.

Of course, I'm sure you haven't had that kind of heat build up in your house, so that's not a good explanation in your case, just another silly story I thought I'd share! :-)

Hope it turns out to be easy and relatively inexpensive to fix.

E. Jane said...

Sorry about your door. Sometimes if there's a small unnoticed crack or hole, it can create a shattered door, especially in extreme temps. Looking forward to seeing the photos of your herb bed!

Winnie said...

Wow! I learn something everyday! I never knew that could happen. Sorry you have to deal with that! I will file that away in case it ever happens to me. Can't wait to see your herbs!

Notes from Maggie's Farm said...

Look, girl. There's at least FOUR of us. (you crack me up--'as both of you know....')

Day Last

 Mike finished his chemo yesterday. The cumulative effects of four rounds beginning in early July are making him pretty uncomfortable, and t...