Categories
Uncategorized

Getting ready to close the deal




lara_dock.jpg

Originally uploaded by Suffering the Benz

We close on the new house tomorrow and I’ll be glad when that’s over. Of course, the real work starts from there. The move. Thanks to Lara, that probably won’t be as painful as it could be. She’s been ruthlessly efficient, building spreadsheets detailing what will go where in the new abode and ruthlessly discarding the crap we’ve accumulated during our 10 years in the house in Hardin Valley.

Today, we did the walk through, which gave us a final opportunity to measure things and plan what will go where. In this picture, Lara is standing on our dock with Hidden Cove in the background. It was pretty exciting to stand there and look around, and it took everything I had not to jump in the water to celebrate. There will be time for that tomorrow …

I added a few photos from today’s walkthrough to the Flickr set I created for the house. Hope to add more as we get moved in.

Categories
Dog Bob

Xena the cone head …




xena_cone.jpg

Originally uploaded by Suffering the Benz

I took Xena to the vet Thursday for what I thought was going to be minor surgery to remove a golf-ball size tumor from her ear. Not quite. Apparently, the tumor was solidly connected to the ear , not hanging by a thread, as I’d thought.

When I went to pick her up, she was pretty doped up and wearing a large cone made of hard plastic.

“She’ll get used to it,” the vet tech said as he helped me load her into the truck. “My lab learned to use his as a weapon.”

Poor Xena cried through the night Thursday, keeping me up and prompting me to lie on the floor next to her for a while to comfort her. She must have been in a good bit of pain. And she’s a schemer. Apparently, Lara did the same thing a few times during the night, too.

It’s now been a few days of life with the cone. The pain appears to be gone but not the indignation at having to wear a giant white hood. But as the vet tech predicted, she’s learned to use the cone as a battering ram, sweeping aside me and the other dogs as she barges through the house. So far, though, it’s doing a great job of keeping her away from the wound, which is healing nicely. We’ll find out whether the tumor was benign or malignant this week …

Categories
Books

It’s in the cards …

When I was a kid, I squandered untold dollars at the local Stop N Go buying pack after pack of baseball cards, trying to get all of the World Champion 1971 Pittsburgh Pirates. I’d buy a dozen packs or so and stand by a garbage can outside the store, throwing away everything but the Pirates while the clerk stood inside shaking his head at the idiot kid in pursuit of all the Bucs. Eventually, I got them all, and I still have them somewhere, stashed in a box that brought me live chameleons that I’d ordered from an ad in the back of Boy’s Life.

That was pretty much the extent of my fascination with baseball cards. And baseball, for that matter. So I was a little dubious when I picked up a copy of “The Card: Collectors, Con Men and the True Story of History’s Most Desired Baseball Card.” I bought it mostly because Mike O’Keeffe, a buddy of mine whom I worked with at the Rocky Mountain News in Denver, is a co-author of the book. And it turns out it’s a great book, well worth checking out even if you have only nominal interest in baseball cards and baseball in general.

The story behind the T206 Honus Wagner card is fascinating, especially considering that it’s now valued at well over $1 million. Mike and Teri Thompson do a great job bringing the assorted characters to life, including the myriad schemes and machinations behind the multiple deals involving the relic, a 1909 tobacco card featuring Wagner’s picture. And Mike puts his chops as an investigative reporter to good use, revealing a lot of the shenanigans that surround big-time baseball card collecting.

A few interesting tidbits:

— Details on Wayne Gretzky partner and former L.A. Kings owner Bruce McNall’s dubious financial dealings, including the fact that he floated loans using bogus “game-used” jerseys and horses he didn’t even own as collateral. Gretzky and McNall partnered to buy the Wagner card for $451k in 1991.

— A great photo of the house Wagner lived in in Carnegie, just outside Pittsburgh, where a “Go Steelers” banner hangs proudly outside the house even though the current occupants have only the vaguest notion of the Pirates great whose image graces the most valuable baseball card on the planet. What a total Pittsburgh moment.

— A tour of collector Michael Gidwitz’s Chicago apartment, which is packed with memorabilia, including a lewd drawing of Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky that features Alfred E. Neuman’s face “superimposed on the former president’s penis head.” (Gidwitz apparently has quite a collection of pornographic images featuring Neuman. Truth really is stranger than fiction.