Video

Going to the Snow

Going to the Snow from Mike C on Vimeo.

We spent the weekend in Grass Valley with Lucy’s grandparents. Lucy had been looking forward to the trip all week, especially our Saturday trek to Soda Springs where she’d be able to play in the snow.

Lucy got her first taste of snow last year. However, she wasn’t really prepared for that encounter. Her excitement dissipated quickly once she realized how cold and wet snow could be.

However, this year was very different. Lucy’s three now, a grizzled veteran compared to the two year old rookie we plopped into the snow last year. This time she had a much better idea of what to expect. We also planned things a bit better, making sure to bring along a snow sled for the kid.

In this video you’ll see us all having a great time in the snow. Lucy’s excitement can be quite infectious that way. Also, if you watch the whole video, you just might catch a special moment where Lucy and her Gpa cut the rug together. Fun stuff.

Pet Store, Toy Store, Etc.

Pet Store, Toy Store, Etc. from Mike C on Vimeo.

We had a nice relaxing Saturday with no set plans or obligations. We ended up hitting the pet supply shop to grab some Wubie essentials. We also fit in a visit to a toy store, book store, picked up some groceries, and made some time for lunch. I managed to get some video of the pet shop, toy store, and lunch.

Note: if the video stutters, click on the “HD is On” button so that it changes to “HD is Off.”

Music used:

Better Late Than Never: Christmas, 2009 Video

Christmas, 2009 from Mike C on Vimeo.

I wrote a post for last Christmas that included pictures but never got around to making a video until now. So here it is, a video of our Christmas 2009 get-together with friends and family.

Note: if the video stutters, click on the “HD is On” button so that it changes to “HD is Off.”

Music used:

Garage Days Revisited (400th Post)

Over the last year or so, our little garage has gotten a little messy, full of boxes piled on boxes, all crammed with random stuff. This in itself is bad enough, but to top that off, we had no idea what was inside said boxes unless we actually opened ‘em up and started rooting around.

It was the worst, especially when you were looking for something important. This video, taken in November, 2009, shows off some of the mess:

Garage Days Revisited from Mike C on Vimeo.

Jill knows me well enough to know that when things start getting messy and unstructured, I start getting antsy. Well, I must have hit my maximum capacity for messiness, because I spent much of the weekend (and part of the week) straightening out the garage.Though it’s still a work in progress, it’s a lot better than what it was.

Cleaning Up the GarageCleaning Up the Garage

When I first started cleaning up, I noticed that many of the cardboard moving boxes we’d been using for our junk were starting to break down. The cardboard was beginning to warp and sag. I decided to replace them with 18 gallon plastic tubs.

Cleaning Up the GarageCleaning Up the Garage

Though it took a while, during the transition from old, soggy cardboard to shiny, new plastic tubs, I made sure to inventory all of our junk and keep the data in a Google Docs spreadsheet.

Though our wireless network initially didn’t extend to our detached garage, I created a second wireless network with an old Airport Express access point I had and placed it as close as I could to our garage. Luckily, it worked out and I now had wireless access in the garage!

It’s so cool. I can bring a laptop into the garage and use Google Open Docs to help keep the garage in order. I share the spreadsheet with Jill so that at any time she can see if something she needs is in the garage. If she sees something she wants in the spreadsheet she can grab it herself or just say, “Hey, can you grab me that Diddy Kong Racing cartridge? It’s in bin #27.”

Yep, it’s a very satisfying feeling indeed when your techy, geeky, and Felix Unger sides can all meet and play nice.

BTW, this is our 400th post. Can ya believe it? 400 posts about cats, babies, and tv shows. In case you’re interested, here are some past ‘milestone’ posts:

Lucy playing

Here’s a video of Lucy reading to koala, shopping at the bookstore, and playing with Wubie. It’s a bit leisurely-paced…and about 9 minutes long. So get a cup of tea, settle in, and enjoy!

Lucy playing (large version) from Jill C on Vimeo.

Year Three: 2009 (Jul – Dec)

Year Three (Pt 2) from Mike C on Vimeo.

It’s the end of another year, so here’s the latest installment of our “Year X” series, where I post a collage of pics and videos from the preceding six months. Here are the previous installments:

  1. Year One: 2007 Part 1 (Jan – Jun) | Part 2 (Jul – Dec)
  2. Year Two: 2008 Part 1 (Jan – Jun) | Part 2 (Jul – Dec)
  3. Year Three: 2009 Part 1 (Jan – Jun)

All pics and short videos used in this collage were taken between July 1 and Dec 31, 2009. Noteworthy happenings from the last half year:

Music used:

Wubert.net (Misc)

Here’s the last of the stuff from the old wubert.net site. I figure why let all this stuff just disappear when I can archive it in a couple of posts here on mikeandjill? For wubert pics, click here.

Wubert: Exit Stage Left from Mike C on Vimeo.

Wubert: Driveby from Mike C on Vimeo.

Newsletter 1Newsletter 2

Newsletter 3Newsletter 4

wubert_wp_1680x1050a

Wubert (Misc Writings)
My Magic Bowl

Yes, I’ll admit it—I’m a little spoiled. Toys, friends (hi, Shmacky!), slow-moving fleshy targets, tasty toenails, good looks—I’ve had my share of good fortune. However, it is in the arena of sustenance that I consider myself especially blessed.

My primary diet consists of ‘crunchies’—highly textured, spherically shaped, nuggets of flavor. However, the crunchies are incidental in this tale. Incidental because today I wish to speak of my magic bowl.

Each morning, I slither through the sheets of my bed, bounce to the floor with catlike grace, and make a purposeful scoot over to my beloved food bowl, my magic food bowl. To the untrained (i.e., weird, non-elliptical) eye, there is nothing notable about my bowl; just an innocuous little plastic tub. However, I know better (DUH—I’m a cat.)

I know that in the night, in between my nightly rounds, sometime after my midnight recitals, my magic bowl performs its…uh…magic.

It gathers my sacrifices.

It retrieves the sacred bottle caps I’ve deposited beneath the couch, fetches the eyeliners and pens I’ve batted down the bathroom sink drain, grabs the old, oh so last year toys that I’ve banished from my toybox to the nether regions of the condo.

It takes these sacrifices and transmogrifies them into something crunchy, something tasty, something that fills my bowl every morning when I awake.

It’s my magic bowl.

Christmas (aka The Tree and his Lackeys Reappear)

They’re back. I knew it was only a matter of time. Every year or so, I’m bombarded by a maddening array of univited guests. It always starts the same way:

Big, dumb, red socks inexplicably begin popping up, adhering themselves to the walls (Yes! Just like those flying pizza-deals that attacked Spock in that one Star Trek episode! You’ve got it!) Anyway, these big dumb socks start sticking to the walls, like it’s real cool or something, and I’m like, “Pffft…whatever.” However, my cloak of insouciance barely masks the torment that they do indeed wreak upon my gentle soul. They dangle, just beyond my fuzzy reach, mocking the compact efficiency of my inseam. The bastards! Once my knitted nemeses make their appearance, it’s only a matter of time before their pine-scented master comes calling.

Have I told you that their master is a coward? He never shows up during one of my (4) waking hours (per day.) Nope! He always slinks in and gets situated while I’m napping! Yep, I’ll wake up from a nap, knock out a couple of slow blinks, then take a leisurely stroll toward my crunchy bowl…and encounter a strange plastic tree thingy shmack dab in my living room! Yeah, right, like tree-thingys belong indoors, on carpet, like they’re cats or somethin’! To make things worse, my neon and needled intruder will be sporting the most gaudy, obnoxious “bling-bling” jewelery one could imagine. Yep, we’re talking blinking this, flashing that. I swear, the thing couldn’t look worse if it started rocking a Member’s Only jacket.

Anyway, the only thing that gets me through the long hard days of “surly socks and testy trees” is knowing that I’ll awake one day and they’ll all be gone. And my home will be at peace again, or at least until those loud, disfigured brats come banging on my door, demanding sugary bribes!

My Name’s Wubert, and I’m a Thermometer

The National Resources Defense Council sucks. Why? Let me explain. Okay, so we’ve established the fact that I’m used to getting my way. What can I say? I’m charming, fuzzy, and I can sing. That’s called a triple-threat. I’m a regular Sammy Davis w/ whiskers.

Anyway, it’s in my contract, right after the “signee agrees to be charming, fuzzy, and agreeable to performing singing recitals while roaming through the condo each morning between the hours of 1:00 AM and 4:00 AM” part. Yep, right there in black and white it also mentions this sweet payoff: “in exchange for the performance of said tasks, the signee will receive love, shelter, food, companionship, amiable-but-plodding targets, and tuna treats.” Yep, you read that right: T-U-N-A!

Well, when I first started working, the tuna dispersal averaged out to about once a week. I immediately realized a change needed to be made, that the tuna production needed to ramp up considerably in order to ensure that this particular supply/demand model didn’t end up a total sham. We’re talking economic integrity here!

Through the years, I argued my case re: the need to correct the tuna/cat supply/demand imbalance whenever a fridge-opener entered the kitchen or touched a can opener. My due diligence paid off, the tuna gates opened wider as my dim targets slowly realized the flawlessness of my arguments. My booty? Until recently, I’d chowed down on tuna every day! I’d long considered it one of my grandest conquests.

Alas, my days of tuna and roses have ended. The cause of this injustice? The NRDC. One grey day, one of my fridge-openers skimmed through an article concerning mercury contamination in fish. To corroborate the story, he visited the NRDC site and discovered this alleged “fact”: “the average 16 pound person should only eat a can of tuna every 32 days.” I remember the day all too well. I remember the words he uttered as he viewed the NRDC site:

“MY GOD! WUBERT’S A WALKING THERMOMETER!”

I can’t go into detail on the attitude my fridge-openers adopted regarding tuna dispersal once they visited that awful site. It’s much too painful to revisit. Let’s just say that a darkness has fallen over the mayor of Wubie-Town, and the NRDC is to blame!

Resolutions Shmezolutions!

Yet again, we’re nearing the debut of a brand spankin’ new year. Like many other nitwits, yours truly usually lobs a few trite, not so very well thought out resolutions into the ether whenever a glossy new, fresh off the clearance rack, cat calendar appears in my work area.

“Lose a few OZ’s”
“Decipher the intricate series of machinations that allows one to open the fridge”
“Eat a vegetable”

Ultimately, resolutions like these have about as a much impact on my life as a tuna-giver yodeling “Ouch! Bad cat! Bad cat!” in my general direction. That is: nada, zilch, no impacto whatsoevero.

Why is this? Why are the best of intentions routinely reduced to so much nothingness on an annual basis? I gave this question a good half minute of contemplation between naps the other day and found the answer.

Brace yourself.

It’s ‘cuz the resolutions we make are too tough! Lose weight? Learn new things? Eat vegetables? Puhleeeze! Just thinking about choking down a brussels sprout makes me wanna hork! Now, just ‘cuz of some goofy ill-conceived resolution, I’m supposed to treat ‘em like a dead fly (YUM!) I find by der windower? I don’t think so.

Now, I’m not saying we should do away with new year’s resolutions (at least not yet.) All I’m saying is we should be a bit more realistic when we make ‘em. The worse thing you can do is make something nearly impossible (ex.: being as kewl as me) a resolution for the coming year. You might as well skip the resolution part and go straight to “setting up reservations for an indefinite stay at Loser-Land” my friend!

Remember, just think baby steps and you should be ok—unless, you’re a dog, ‘cuz in that case you’re just gonna have to face up to the fact (as soon as you get a break from kowtowing to the man) that that “L” on your forehead is there for the long haul, Woof-Boy!

Bad Eye Days and Tofurkey

Don’t get me wrong. 99% of the time owning four sets of big ol’ sharp talons is a good thing. Really, what’s not to like? With claws I can:

  • go from full on sprint to sudden stop in mere milliseconds (while simultaneously introducing cool new textures to the carpeting.)
  • stir the sleepiest of rommates to full “how may I serve you?” attention with a quick, simple “ptoink.” (My usual response to their query: “Refill my crunchies and give me $2, my pajamad servant.”)
  • successfully integrate my abstract expressionist leanings with my thoughts on society (and the living room couch.)

I think you get it. Being pointy can be pretty cool. But alas, there is that 1% of the time when having claws is about as much fun as a trip to the vet (aka “that weirdo w/ the thermometer.”)

That 1% of the time can usually be summed up as a ‘bad eye’ day. Yep, every once in a while a hair, dust particle, or whatever, gets a hankerin’ for a little R&R and decides that one of my pupils looks like a good place to get room service and a complimentary bathrobe.

And once this happens, I’m pretty much stuck, ‘cuz in terms of removing this unwanted tenant, two of my biggest assets: being covered in hair and pointy things, become as useful (and fashionable) as the old dude in the hemp shirt across the street shouting “the tofurkey’s ready and in the hizzzouse!”

Yep, a bad eye day is indeed that bad. And yes, I’m wearing a tie dyed shirt as I write this.

Christmas Eve, 2009 (Video)

Christmas Eve (2009) from Mike C on Vimeo.

Last year we posted a video of the kid making a Christmas eve snack plate for Father Christmas and his reindeer. I remember being pretty stoked with the video because it actually displayed Lucy saying a few words, a rare happening back then.

Boy, how times have changed!

The kid’s vocabulary has exploded over the past twelve months. Where once stood a toddler making tentative attempts at lone, monosyllabic words, we now have a little girl who speaks in complete sentences and even improvises songs! Is that cool or what? She even plays jokes now:

“Mommy, I have a present for you!” = “my diaper is full!”
Hilarity ensues for all involved (except mommy.)

It was neat having a cute little baby. I treasure that time and occasionally find myself getting nostalgic for a long-gone version of Lucy, a phase the kid has outgrown and discarded. However, this new kid, the one we’re actually able to have conversations with, is extremely cool. I can’t wait until she’s old enough where we can both play pranks on her mommy!

Puzzle Night with the Bay City Rollers

Puzzle Night from Mike C on Vimeo.

Jill and I often joke that Lucy will be considered pretty hip (ie, a social outcast) when she starts going to school because of her affinity for the pop music her parents play for her. Yep, ‘current’ acts like the Beatles, Sweet, Neil Diamond, the Bay City Rollers, T Rex, and Oasis—they always get the kid dancing and singing.

In addition to retro pop music, the kid enjoys puzzles, so this video shot in early November combines both. BTW, creating this video reminded me when “Saturday Night” was a shiny new song way back in the mid-70′s, when I was a kid. My sister Patty and I would always sing along to “Saturday Night” whenever it came on the car radio. Yep, as our parents drove us around in our old Pontiac station wagon, we’d sing along happily. We thought the chorus was “Eh-Aye, E-Wha, E-Wha–Night!”

Waldorf School

Waldorf School from Mike C on Vimeo.

Yesterday we visited a holiday faire at a Waldorf school. Lucy was very excited about the visit, exclaiming, “I’m going to school—like a big girl!” The place was packed with kids and parental units, and there were lots of activities.

In between gnome adventures and cookie forest explorations, Lucy got to:

  • decorate cookies
  • dance to a live band (and crowd)
  • walk a rickety bridge
  • play in a fort
  • make “bird nests” with her mommy
  • run, run, run (and play) for most of the day

The school was pretty neat. We talked a bit to some of the teachers and were also able to see some really creative student projects. Lucy had a great time. It was an ideal way for her to experience her “first day” at school, though she currently thinks your average school day is equal parts cookie decorating, running, dancing, and exploring.