Showing posts with label London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London. Show all posts

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Unwanted house guests

Mice!

We aren't sure how many there were, but over a period of a week or two, we first started to notice that we heard scuffling of tiny feet in the evening while watching a movie, then Anne noticed one scurry across the floor and into a hole between the floorboards. Then, a few days later, we noticed that the basket where we were keeping our dry goods had lots of crumbs beneath it. Closer examination revealed little holes that had been chewed in the plastic bags and resulted in us throwing away a bunch of food and enclosing the rest in a hard plastic tub. Doesn't look as nice, but at least things won't get eaten until we're ready to eat them ourselves!

Perhaps I should pause here and explain a little about our flat. It is a nice flat with pretty modern fixtures and features, and you can tell that it was renovated fairly recently. The floor is a real traditional hardwood floor, and by that, I mean that the floorboards are not always evenly cut or joined together, the nails often work themselves out and we have to go through with a hammer every ten days or so and nail down the ones that catch our socks. In a couple of places, there are small holes where the wood had a knot that was not filled in by the builder and you can see through to the foundation if you look through. Nothing we can do about it, but that's just how it is. So when I say that we hear mice sometimes, we're never sure if they (it?) is running across our floor or underneath, or in the neighbor's walls, or even in the flat above us.

Anyway, so we've set traps, but apparently these mice have that guy from Ratatouille or something telling them what is safe to eat and what isn't, because they have yet to take the bait. I called an exterminator service the other day and asked what their service involved. They use poisons and do a survey to tell you where the holes are that need to be filled, then give you an estimate on what it would cost to fill those holes. For that, they'll charge you 150 pounds plus tax. I chuckled when they said the part about filling the holes - since I don't need a professional opinion to tell me that a mouse has about a million options if he wants to enter our house. And the idea of leaving poisons around the house with small children is not exactly high on my list either.

So, rather than have an exterminator come out, we decided to try one more option first - you can buy a small device that you plug into your wall and that produces an inaudible ultrasonic pulse along with an electromagnetic pulse that runs through the walls of your house, that is supposed to be uncomfortable for rodent's hearing. They run 25 pounds a piece, so we got two for our small flat (one for each end of the house). So far, so good, though one of them does emit a small chirp from time to time, so I think it might be defective and we should take it back and get a replacement. No sight nor sound of mice since we plugged in.

I should also point out that when I was at the store looking for "a better mousetrap", there were three or four other people looking for the exact same thing at the same time. I made a comment to one of them that there must be something going on for us all to be looking for mouse traps at the same time and was told that yes, it is "that time of year". At least it was comforting to know that we hadn't been keeping our house so messy that we had attracted them in the first place!

Hopefully the last posting on this subject!

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Are we really almost halfway through February already?


Boy, time flies! I can hardly believe we're already almost to Valentine's Day.

I can promise you that the reason I haven't posted (and that Anne hasn't posted) in a couple months is that we've been SUPER busy. Just to catch you up briefly, since I posted my last note back in December, we've:

Had our first Christmas in London:




Gone ice skating at the Natural History Museum on New Year's Day. We had fun, though it was much more fun when we figured out that Chase could be entertained better by counting how many people on the rink fell down than by actually skating.
Isabelle & Chase started school the first week of January. We were lucky enough that a spot opened up for both of them at the same school. Anne takes both children to school every morning and picks them up every afternoon, which is fine when the weather's good because it means that both children can ride their bikes. But if it happens to rain (which is like almost every day), that means no bikes, and the tubes and busses are much more likley to be overcrowded.
In mid-January, we traveled to Florida for Mark & Katie's wedding and then a week-long Caribbean cruise with the whole family:

We all had a great time and I'm sure Anne will include several photos in her posting as well, so I don't want to spoil any surprises...

Hopefully, I'll put together some posts in the next few days on one or more of the following:
1) Presidential campaigning in the States
2) Details on some of the beautiful weather we've been enjoying here in London lately
3) Thoughts on President Hickley's passing
Anyway, Anne will also be posting soon, so keep an eye on her blog as well (see link at right). I'll try to post more in the coming few days...

Monday, November 12, 2007

Have we found a place to live?

Hey everyone (or...all three or four of you who read this blog),

Anne and the children arrived safely in the UK last Thursday evening. I was able to meet them at the airport and we took a cab back in to the city, where I had just checked in to a corporate apartment earlier that evening. We'll be staying there for about a month while we find a place to live and hopefully will have our stuff arrive in time for us to avoid having to pay for extra time or sleep on the floor!

We wasted no time in looking for a place and spent all day Friday out with an estate agent (British for "realtor") who took us to something like 15 different properties in one day. Luckily, we were able to find someone from church willing to watch the children even though they had only briefly met us back when we were here in August.

We think we found a few properties we liked, including one that we put an offer on today (Monday). It will likely be a few days before we hear back, so until then, we're going to keep looking.

We'll post pictures of the house once we have some firm idea whether or not we'll get the house so everyone can see. We actually saw the house twice, once with our estate agent and once again the next day with only the listing agent. We took the children back by the house to get their thoughts - they really liked it, and as luck would have it, there is another family from the ward who live right across the street, so they invited us over for lunch after we had seen the house. They have four children and are also from the States, so that would be fun to live that close to another family in the ward.

Isabelle and Chase were asked to participate in the Primary program yesterday. Chase backed out at the last minute, but he did stand and sing all the songs from his seat with us. Isabelle not only agreed to sit on the stand and help with the singing, but she was also given a part to read, which she did very well, especially considering she had never seen that particular part before.

Chase did something funny last night. I had some work to do and Anne was taking a nap to catch up on some jet lag and to try to get over the cold she's been fighting off for several days. While she was sleeping, I set the children up to call Deedee and Grandpa. While on the phone, they spoke to their Uncle Mark and Chase explained that he had a "cough due to a cold." Apparently, Mark was confused by this, and he asked Chase "What's a cough due to a cold?" whereupon Chase turned to me and asked "Daddy, what's a cough do to a cold?" When I told him I wasn't sure what he was talking about, he then told Mark "He doesn't know what a cough does to a cold...)

Anyway, funny story and thought it worth writing down...