Look At All The Progress!

As I sit down to make this post, I realize it would be more interesting reading if I had taken pictures of people during the move.

The problem is that I was busy when we had our volunteers around to help!

Anyway, I wanted to put these up…

The living room after we got the truck unloaded:

living_room_before

And how it looks today:

living_room_after

For a while there I didn’t know if we could ever get all the stuff out of that room. Moving on, the spare room… well we didn’t fare quite so well there. It started out really bad:

Spare_room_before

And got somewhat better:

spare_room_after

Clearly we made some progress, but we didn’t have any problems filling that room up. I still think we are going to be able to shuffle things enough to fit a workable bed in there sometime soon.

If you haven’t guessed, I am rather excited to be done unpacking! πŸ™‚ I probably went a little overboard, but I took some video too!

Well, thats our place.

On a completely unrelated note, I have been listening to some rather amazing music while I worked on this post! I may have to buy the mp3s up, they would work well with my “drown out my coworkers” non-vocal musicΒ  playlist πŸ™‚

-Jordan

(Nearly) Unpacked

As I write this we have ONE box left to deal with. It is full of books, and we ran out of bookshelf space, so I have no idea when that will happen. I am tempted to call us unpacked for the foreseeable future.

I think the place is mostly decorated, I may learn differently, but we are running out of wall space, and Heather communicated her intent to decorate without adding any new items, so, unless I overlooked something we are basically out of things to hang too.

My biggest concern moving into this place was the rather small closets. The bachelor that was living in the unit when we toured it had overflowed into both closets, a clear sign we weren’t going to fit all that well. We had two free standing hanger bars that we purchased in Atlantic. With those, and one additional free standing hangar, we managed to hang everything we needed to hang. I measured it out, we have 315 inches of hanging space, and it is 100% used. I should point out this place has no coat closet, or anything else, other than the two bedroom closets. All the same, I think our Omaha place must have had about 200% more closet space.

There are worse problems to have I suppose πŸ™‚

-Jordan

A Landmark Day

One detail of my new job that I don’t think I have mentioned, here or anywhere for that matter, is the fact that I need to wear actual shirts. I have managed to get by with polos for the past few years.

This creates a problem for our old system of laundry, and as I have discussed before ironing isn’t really something we practice around here.

Well, it wasn’t:

Ironing

What you see there is me ironing a shirt with a brand new* iron, on a brand new ironing board. You are probably thinking, “but he has had that job for quite a while, and its mid week already… shouldn’t this have happened sooner?” Yes, yes it should have! I got by using up every single shirt I owned, and then wearing a few that I though looked ok straight out of the wash. The wrinkles caught up with me eventually though, so I broke down and setup the ironing board.

I suppose I would be better off doing a batch of shirts to at least cover a week, but for now I only did enough to get me through to the next night where I will have time to tackle a few more shirts.

I hear rumors of shirts that are more likely to come out of the wash in a wearable state, and plan to research that rumor in detail soon. I will miss the days of polos, but outside of the ironing aspect I think I have adapted well.

-Jordan

* when I say “brand new” I mean the same kit that has traveled with me for years, still in the factory packing πŸ™‚

Done With Atlantic! (Really!)

Heather and I made our last trip to the house in Atlantic today, to final-clean the place before turning in the keys.

I will miss parts of living there. The being in a house was a nice change from apartment living. Being able to open a few windows and actually have cross-ventilation is remarkable. We didn’t hear neighbors at all. We had a front porch, with a swing, overlooking a little yard with a huge tree. We could walk all around town any time of day or night and not be even a little worried about safety. We could walk anywhere in town. I loved getting to see farming going on every day, especially harvest. I suppose it is possible I have an overly rosy memory of a lot of that, but I really enjoyed getting to be involved with harvest as a kid.

It reminded me a lot of growing up in Curtis, when I would see people at the grocery store and they knew each other and were just talking. It was kind of sad to know we were never going to have enough time outside of our drive to actually become part of the community. We were living with one foot in Des Moines, and one foot in Omaha… Leaving not much to put down in Atlantic.

On the other hand, there are certainly things I will not miss. Driving 120 miles a day chief among them. Having to hand-wash all our dishes got old rather fast. Living in a place with water pressure so low it wasn’t possible to do any two things with water at the same time had it’s drawbacks. Having to keep our trash for a week in the closet because we didn’t have a garage or a dumpster didn’t end up being as big of a problem as I expected, but still wasn’t ideal. Somehow that house managed to always be freezing cold, even when the thermostat said it shouldn’t be.

And finally, the daily thorn in my side, the thing that annoyed me so much it made me wonder if bathing daily was worth it:

Atlantic_shower

A 360 degree shower curtain! It looked… sketchy to begin with. After the house started getting cold I discovered that the hot air, inside the envelope, rising out of the shower caused the walls to suck in, meaning you couldn’t shower without having plastic clinging to at least one side of you at all times. I know I sound like I am whining, but it really got old after a while.

Somehow we managed to survive though, so I guess it can’t have been so bad πŸ™‚

-Jordan

October Catch-Up

Have I mentioned how nice it is to have a reduced commute? πŸ™‚

I wanted to take a minute and summarize some of the noteworthy things that happened during the blur that was our last weeks living in Atlantic.

First up: Leaves fell off the trees. While this was expected, Heather and I were living in a house in Atlantic, and they expected us to deal with them.

Leaves

That picture actually shows the full extent of our progress. We managed to get the leaves into big piles, before realizing we didn’t have bags. We picked up bags, but not until the end of the weekend, forgetting that we were never actually in Atlantic while the sun was up during the week.

Luckily, the mowing crew, or our landlady or somebody bagged the leaves for us. I feel pretty bad that we didn’t get it done ourselves, but we were pretty much using all our available energy on other things at that point.

The second noteworthy event happened over the weekend of the first. Heather and I went to Omaha. We left early enough to attend church, and got to see a lot of our friends while we were there. After lunch we stopped for a few minutes at the botanical gardens. I should note that the weather was amazing! Heather and I were both dressed for fall, and got rather warm considering the temperature nearly topped 70.

LG_Fall

After a few minutes enjoying the weather and the colors, we headed to the main event: a Trans-Siberian Orchestra performance that Heather had arranged for us to attend as a birthday present. I don’t have any pictures from the show, and really… No picture would really do it justice. The first half of the show was telling a Christmas story, and while good, not jaw droopingly amazing. The second half contained and abundance of ten-foot jets of flame and fog machines. I cannot begin to tell you how fun it was.

-Jordan

Move In, Day Five

As I write this, the last load of move-backlogged laundry is in the drier, and Heather and I almost have our bedroom closet stocked with work clothes instead of whatever happened to be at the top of the box that got dropped in the room Saturday.

As anyone who was involved with any part of our moving may remember, we have a lot of clothes… and when I say “we” I in this case mean Heather. Although, I do find that a XXL sweatshirt of mine takes up a lot more room than most of the things Heather has… anyway, our new place has maybe one third the closet space we had in Omaha. A lot more room, just not as much storage. We are going to have to get creative, and I fear buy a few items to make our new home feel as tidy as things were back in Omaha.

No mate what it takes to finish getting moved into the new place, the reduction in drive time is amazing! Getting two (plus) hours put into your day makes life so much better! I know I had an easy commute before this all started, but having gone without that extra time for a few months makes me really enjoy my evenings. Granted, most of my evening time has been spent unpacking, but this is only the third work day I have lived in Des Moines. I am sure I will come to take it for granted, but it certainly makes having moved feel good.

… and that load of laundry I mentioned just buzzed, better go attend to it πŸ™‚

-Jordan

Live From Des Moines

Heather and I have finally managed to move all of our stuff into the new place in Des Moines. 48 hours after we picked up the keys, the majority of our stuff is unpacked and in it’s proper place!

We couldn’t have done it without the help of a few great people! Heather’s parents came bright and early Saturday morning, and recruited her cousin Blake and one of his friends. My friend Corey made the drive from Omaha as well. With an abundance of help, and the fact that Heather and I pushed hard Friday night to get everything into boxes, loading the truck went really fast.

On the unload side, a few guys from my new company came buy and helped unload. They were a huge help!

Having so many people on hand to help with the move made things go really fast. Were returning the truck by 3:30pm on Saturday, leaving us with a good chunk of the day to start unpacking.

I think we are really going to like this place, and I can’t wait to throw up a few new pictures of everything, but I wan’t to take the “after” pictures and we need to wrap up a little bit more of the unpacking πŸ™‚

-Jordan

Four Days and 600 Miles Left

… Until we start moving to Des Moines.

This blog is sadly the last place you will have heard this news, but we found a place in Des Moines. Heather and I are really excited to be nearing the end of this phase of our lives where we were driving so much each day. Unfortunately we have to survive a few more days of the drive, while trying to manage the details of a move, and get everything packed before Saturday.

I think this is shaping up to be one of our harder weeks, with respect to outside of work fatigue. My goal is to pack no less than one box each night, but judging from the number of used, but empty boxes I have in the corner… that isn’t going to get us packed in time.

For posterity (aka, my reference later), and anyone who hasn’t heard through more dependable channels… My job is somewhat similar to what I was doing in Omaha. While I have only been there a week, I think it is going to be a really great place to work!

The place Heather and I are moving into is in the extreme west part of West Des Moines, a really nice area. We managed to find a two bedroom, two bathroom place, with a garage for a really reasonable price (roughly the same as we were paying for our place in Omaha)

I really should get back to doing something more productive now, but I wanted to get a quick note posted of our current status!

-Jordan