Category Archives: moving

The Controlled Chaos of a Move

For the past two days Mack and I have had to take a break from all the moving and focus on letting our bodies heal.

Boxes everywhere

I say heal since, as those of you who have moved by yourself before know, furniture is heavy. I know I’m a fairly physically weak individual so the fact I helped Mack move his couch from point A to point B was quite impressive… especially when you consider I had a box spring fall on my foot.

I hate furniture. Seriously I do.

Empty entertainment center

Of course moving the couch this time was nothing compared to when Mack and I got it up a flight of stairs at our old apartment in Florida. Just remembering that experience in the middle of the Florida summer heat is enough to make me want to break out in hives.

Bed frame

An unexpected surprise in all of this is finally unpacking boxes that we’ve had sitting in storage for almost a year. I swear to you it’s almost like Christmas as we open boxes and are like “oh my! I forgot we had this! Score!”

He thinks he's helping.

Minus the box of cereal I packed for some reason. It was way past it’s sell by date by the time we finally opened that box…

Boxes

Still, my packing the cereal wasn’t as bad as the fruit someone packed in a box for us for our Arizona to Florida move. That was a very unpleasant discovery, let me tell you.

Clean Dishes

I’m glad we have the ability to take this move slow since we’ve gotten so burnt out with moving in the past we end up getting frustrated and leaving stuff in boxes. This time though? Slow and easy with the happy thought that we’re here to stay for awhile and have all the time to enjoy it.

If anything else I could be a professional mover at this point.

I should look into that… might solve the unemployment problem. Hmm…

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Sugar Glider Taxi Service


Photo by Emily Staples

I know I can’t say this enough but I hate moving. From living in boxes to not knowing where anything is to hauling heavy objects between point A and point B it just gets old. Mack and I are “frequent movers” in that we’ve moved at least once a year since we started dating in 2007. Fortunately I think we’ve settled in our current place in the sense that we want to stay here for a few years.

Look at us, being all adult like.

Optimistically I want to say that we’ve moved about half of our stuff over to the new place. I want to believe this estimate since I might just burst into tears and hug one of my not-so-willing cats if it is more. Yesterday we hauled over the heavy furniture and I have a whole new awareness of all the muscles in my forearms.

Through all the moving and relocating we decided, for simplicity sake, to have the sugar glider over at my brothers house while we move boxes into the new place. That coupled with the fact we couldn’t “officially” move in until the carpet was cleaned.

Sugar gliders fairly easy to handle critter in that it stays in its cage and is active at night since they’re nocturnal. Overall it wouldn’t be too much of a brain stretch for me to take care of it at night while I was there (since we hadn’t moved the co-dependent cats over yet, either). I have, of course, taken care of sugar gliders many times before but still, they’re such easy creatures it was one less thing for me to worry about.

Now, I’m not sure if I’ve mentioned this before but my brother Mark likes to keep his house at about sub-zero. He would point out that it’s in the 60s and it’s “comfortable.” I say he’s in a state of delusion and why are Mom and I the only ones in the family who can’t maintain a normal body temperature?

Damn you genetics.

Anyway, for those of you who don’t know much about sugar gliders they originate in Australia. This means that they tend to like warmer temperatures.

I think you can see where I am going with this.

Last week I get back to my brothers house and go to feed the sugar glider and notice that he’s curled up trying to maintain body heat. Or at least that is what I eventually figured out since he wasn’t really moving much and I thought DEAR GOD I killed the sugar glider! But no, “fortunately”, he was just cold. My heart instantly bled for him since I understand so well the feeling of being cold.

I’d like to lie and say I kept a cool head about this but there are people who read this who know I like to panic sometimes. Especially at 12:30am. I instantly called Mack and was like “The sugar glider is cold and stuff happened and I’m afraid he’ll DIE.” Mack, bless his heart, went about trying to calm me down as I informed him I’d be driving the sugar glider over there and warm up the house since he needs heat, STAT.

The ensuing chaos would do sitcoms proud. Now, I’m slightly ashamed to admit that that night was the first time I’d actually really held a sugar glider. Something about animals that randomly relieve themselves on you isn’t really appealing to me. That night the wellbeing of the glider outweighed my fear of poop on my hand so I grabbed a wash cloth and wrapped the glider up and held him against my torso. It was for the gliders own benefit to go into the wash cloth since at that point my hands were icy cold (my body temperature drops when I’m stressed/upset). Running upstairs I surprised my brother by bursting forth from the basement while begging him to hold the sugar glider (or “The Freak” as Mark calls him) while I ran downstairs to get the cage to take over to our new house.

Perhaps now would be a good time to remind you that I drive a Toyota Corolla? Which has enough space inside to fit a postage stamp at best?

So here I am, 12:40am, standing outside trying to fit this tall cage in and not finding a way to make it work. I call Mack back and told him that I’d have to take the glider over and hand it over to him, grab his car, go get the cage, and come back. A magical came of delivering objects one by one during the night. Not suspicious at all.

Fortunately after the initial freak out with the cage the rest of my taxi service went off without much of a hitch. It was a little difficult holding the glider in one hand while steering with the other but it was well worth it. By the time I came back with the cage the sugar glider was happy, warm, and relieving himself down Mack’s back.

Ah pets, how you like to keep us humble.

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Coast to Coast Move Day 3

(Wow, it’s been awhile since I blogged about this cross country road trip. Call it a much needed sanity break from it. You can read about the day one and day two).

Day three started a lot better then day two did. For one, the cats kept their crack level down slightly. Sure, they were knocking over suitcases and being their usual jerky selves, however they did manage to sleep a little. This is surprising since I should honestly let you in on a little secret for this road trip:

We sedated the cats.

It’s not like we hard-core elephant tranquilized the cats (though Mack wanted to, since they were in his car). One simple pill and towels sprayed down with relaxing spray and the cats were out cold for most of the four days in the car… minus day one when Gracie went without a pill and she complained… The. Whole. Time. (I can only mildly joke about it due to the complaining Mack and Bob did at me about the situation).

After our complementary breakfast (I’m all about those when traveling, true fact) we gathered all the animals into the car once more (which, with four cats, two sugar gliders, and eleven fish it was no small feat) we were on the road again.

on the road again

Like day two, there was a whole lot of nothing followed by more nothingness. The more we drove through it, the less I got creeped out about wide open spaces. The first time I visited my friend in Oklahoma at the age of eighteen I had to confess to her that being able to see the horizon seriously weirded me out. In Washington you can’t see the horizon really. There is usually trees, hills, mountains, or rain blocking your view. Living in Arizona and Florida I think it prepared me well for the cross country drive.

Unlike the previous days this day, we had a time table, of sorts, that we were following. And by “we” I mean the boys were ordering Hayley and I not to dilly-daddle if we wanted to see both the Corn Palace and Mount Rushmore that day. Much to Hayley and my disappointment (and whining and crying) we missed De Smet and thus denied our inner elementary age selves the joy of visiting a part of Laura Ingalls Wilder history.

laura ingalls wilder home!!!

We did, fortunately, make it to the corn palace early afternoon and were duly impressed.

corn palace

corn!

Early in our talks of driving cross country, I told Mack that no matter what the following conditions must be met:

  1. We are not driving through Texas again. Driving across the widest part of the state four times in a year was more then enough for us and our sanity.
  2. We were driving to and visiting the Corn Palace.

Simple enough conditions, right?

After the Corn Palace and all it’s glory, we had the long time between there and Mount Rushmore. How did we keep ourselves entertained? By playing Oregon Trail on the walkie-talkies between cars.

When we finally got to Mount Rushmore a few hours later it was an awesome tourist trap, as to be expected with national monuments.

mount rushmore

I guess what stuck out most in my mind about Mount Rushmore was that it was a lot smaller then I expected and also the people there… kind of weird. I say that because when we came down from viewing the small (but awesome!) Mount Rushmore I found people hovering near the back of my car taking pictures of my license plate. Granted, I can’t really blame them since my plate looks like this:

so majestic

But it weirded me out nonetheless.

After Mount Rushmore, we hit Wyoming for a few miles which, like most of the rest of our road trip, ended up being a few miles of pure road construction.

construction. again.

When we hit Montana, it was pretty much no cell reception for the whole state. We managed to hit the state right at sunset and were, again, impressed:

awesome sunset.

Then lots of hills, forest, and darkness all around. Hayley and I got pretty giddy in my car listening to Katy Perry and Lady GaGa since we were hungry and apparently a low blood-sugar makes us nuts. It only got worse when the only restaurant (term used loosely) was McDonalds and we cracked ourselves up waiting thirty minutes in the line (when people gave up Hayley commented that they “apparently don’t have what it takes for the McDonalds line!”) at the drive through.

After we had food in our systems, we lasted about another two hours before having to call it a night in a medium sized town half way through the state of Montana. We crashed hard that night with the goal and hope that tomorrow night? We’d be back in Washington and back home.

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