Who is the Buffista who lives on a boat.
Yup that's us. tommy, it's really not less expensive to live on a boat (at least in Marina del Rey) when you take into account bottom cleaning, pump out, slip fees, engine maintenance and fuel. It is really nice to not have to pack anything if we decide to head to Catalina or Malibu. Drunken idiots boating over the summer is the downside.
We don't worry about theft very much because it's a huge pain in the ass to try and climb over the gates and you need a key in and out of them. Plus there are always people on the docks.
The only time we've experienced it being really cold was in January of this year when, due to construction, our dock power was cut off for 24 hours. We rely on space heaters for the most part and even when the dock was frozen, we weren't that cold. Even in our 50 ft. boat, it warms up pretty fast once the heaters kick in.
Nutty, my husband once had an octopus climb up between the boat and the dock while he was filling the water tank. Just might be the octopus army advanced guards.
How many people do you have in your boat? Is it power or sail?
Last night on the news they reported a couple of cities where they are switching their civil servants to the 4-day work week (not just for summer) to money. I searched on google news and found a bunch of stories of different communities doing the same thing.
Dawn, we had the baby and were paddling in MDR and I kept thinking of you!
Okay, I LOVED this part about the subway boys.
When your child cries in public, it is usually an uncomfortable situation. Once, we needed to get home quickly from Chambers Street, and I told Gustav that we had to take whichever blue train came next. The A train pulled in, and Gustav (who had been hoping for the C) started throwing a fit. However, the other passengers in the car gave me warm smiles. I guess they hadn’t seen that many 3-year-olds sobbing, “Local…I want the local.”
4 people (two teens and the hubby and me), it's a 50 ft. power boat so we've got plenty of room. 3 staterooms, 3 bathrooms, washer/dryer, dishwasher. The drawbacks are storage is sometimes tricky to get to (I gotta crawl under the dining table to get to my pots/pans) and no one is allowed to flush any of the heads when someone is in the shower. I'm going to miss it when we move off later this year (the DH's mom has Alzheimer's and we need to move in with her).
Dawn, we had the baby and were paddling in MDR and I kept thinking of you!
You totally should have stopped by! He could have terroized the cats!
My personal best for crappy mail deliveries was when I lived near the university in Jonesboro. While my junk mail was delivered fine, anything that looked like personal mail or that gave no clue of its contents would arrive late with signs of having been opened. The last straw was when the first attempt to deliver a gift I sent meara was returned and my mail carrier bent the package around the mailbox rather than set it in front of my door, leave it at the manager's office, or return it to the post office and leave me a delivery notice.
Buttons for Buffistas! Snarky McF*ckButtons - Wear What You’re *Really* Thinking
My fave is "stop practicing radical entitlement" or maybe "there's always room for bacon".
anything that looked like personal mail or that gave no clue of its contents would arrive late with signs of having been opened.
I had that happen a lot at my old neighborhood (Wicker Park).
Last night on the news they reported a couple of cities where they are switching their civil servants to the 4-day work week (not just for summer) to money. I searched on google news and found a bunch of stories of different communities doing the same thing.
We start 4 10-hour days next week. I'm still the only employee who's not thrilled about it, because I don't want to get up earlier and I don't like having my evenings truncated.
But I keep trying to think of it as an opportunity to get extra rest on the 3-day weekends. Assuming I survive to the weekends.
Monday is when we start it. (My "shift" is 8:15-6:15. We are allowed to work 10 hours between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., and I'm surprised at how many of my co-workers are choosing to work 7-5. Jesus.)
t edit
What I resent is that, unlike other places that are doing the 4-day 10-hour thing, we aren't being given an *option* (for instance, some businesses will be open all 5 days, and then employees can do the 4-day thing if they choose, or they can continue the 5-day week) -- we were simply told that the entire company is doing this, no option. Our only "option" was what 10-hour shift we wanted to work.