Some women get upset when they receive practical gifts. I am not one of those people.
I just finished a project here at the house today that made me think, "Wow, I should share this idea for those people who are looking for the perfect gift for that special lady in their lives."
When we finished the basement, we bought the Kohler Cimmaron toilet. It is pretty much uncloggable. I could go into details, but let's just say that in a bathroom shared by 2 teenage boys, the toilet has survived one year without any "issues."
But that is not the best feature of the toilet. The best feature is the seat that came with it. It is "quiet-close" which means it doesn't come slamming down. But better than that is it's easy removal feature.
Why would you want to remove a toilet seat? Have you ever fine-cleaned the toilet seat where it is bolted to the toilet? YUCK. Despite all efforts of toothbrush and toothpick, it never looked completely clean to me. That is, until this lovely toilet seat came into my life. You simply flip up the bolt covers and slide the whole entire seat off the toilet. I usually stick it in the shower (after wiping it off, of course) and hose it down while I simply wipe away any "remnants" of anything that might have been left at the seat/toilet junction. And then SNAP--you just click the seat back on.
Today when I was at Home Depot I walked by the toilet seat aisle. Normally, I don't stop; however, today something made me look. It had never crossed my mind that I could buy this magical seat for our other toilets, but today I knew that is exactly what I must do. For a minute, I thought, "I should just think about it. I can probably buy them online for less money." After all, I needed 3 of them. My handy Droid phone shopper application made quick work of that, and I decided that although I could save $6 overall by ordering online, I would just be spontaneous and buy them today.
The install was a snap--literally. At least, once I got the old ones off--I'll leave out the details.
So if you are wondering what would be an amazing, practical, useful, magical gift that any mom would appreciate--look no further. Just go to Home Depot. Seriously.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Friday, December 11, 2009
Another one bites the dust
I don't know what is up with KitchenAid mixers. Or maybe what is up with me. Anyway, I killed another mixer this week. This one is 1 1/2 years old.
When Mark and I got married, we took back every piece of china and silver to ZCMI and purchased a KitchenAid mixer. This was 17 years ago, and there was pretty much just one model to choose from, and one color--white. I loved that thing. I used it nearly every day for 10 years. By that time, we had 5 kids, and KitchenAid had come out with a 6-quart bowl--very handy for double batches of cookie dough. So I decided the time had come to upgrade, and I handed my old mixer off to a friend.
That 2nd mixer lasted just over a year before some gears stripped out. I took it to a repair shop, and $100 later, had a functional mixer again. About 6 months went by, and something else died in the mixer. I tried to find the part online to fix it, but it wasn't available.
The 3rd mixer lasted for a few years--until it took its last breath during a batch of sugar cookie dough almost 2 years ago. That's when I got the 4th mixer. Perhaps I would have been better off to accept the damaged box Amazon first sent me rather than insisting on a new one. I'll never know. All I know is that I should have taken the $30 extended warranty offer I got in the mail a few months before the warranty ran out.
It appears that a compression fitting on this last mixer has gone bad. The part where you attach the paddle/whisk/hook just completely fell off the mixer--not just the tiny shaft, but the big, round metal part that fits up inside the mixer. That's where the compression fitting is. The part that is acutally attached to the main mixer body has stripped out and can no longer hold onto the piece from the shaft assembly.
Merry Christmas.
To top things off, as I was rolling out the gingerbread cookie dough from the mixer's last stand, my rolling pin started to make a strange crunchy noise. This was the rolling pin I had purchased 19 1/2 years ago when I went away to BYU. I heard the noise and thought, "Man, that sounds like the ball bearings are giving out." Next thing I knew, a bunch of little metal balls came pouring out one end of the rolling pin. I finished my cookies and dumped my rolling pin in the trash.
I took a trip with Zacky to Williams-Sonoma today to get a new rolling pin and to LOOK at their mixers. I have never had a rolling pin without handles, but I bought one today, and I think it is going to make me very happy.
Now I just need to figure out a new mixer. Do I go for the 5th KitchenAid and splurge $30 for the extended warranty? KitchenAids are so pretty, and they don't jump around on the counter like a Bosch. Also, I make WAAAAAAAAAAY more cookie dough than bread, and I'm not sure I'm satisfied with the Bosch cookie dough. But it has been a loooooong time since I have used a Bosch, and 800 watts is nothing to shake a stick at.
Of course, what I would really like to buy is this:The Hobart Commercial countertop model. Only $2035.11. How many KitchenAid mixers could I go through before this was paid for?
When Mark and I got married, we took back every piece of china and silver to ZCMI and purchased a KitchenAid mixer. This was 17 years ago, and there was pretty much just one model to choose from, and one color--white. I loved that thing. I used it nearly every day for 10 years. By that time, we had 5 kids, and KitchenAid had come out with a 6-quart bowl--very handy for double batches of cookie dough. So I decided the time had come to upgrade, and I handed my old mixer off to a friend.
That 2nd mixer lasted just over a year before some gears stripped out. I took it to a repair shop, and $100 later, had a functional mixer again. About 6 months went by, and something else died in the mixer. I tried to find the part online to fix it, but it wasn't available.
The 3rd mixer lasted for a few years--until it took its last breath during a batch of sugar cookie dough almost 2 years ago. That's when I got the 4th mixer. Perhaps I would have been better off to accept the damaged box Amazon first sent me rather than insisting on a new one. I'll never know. All I know is that I should have taken the $30 extended warranty offer I got in the mail a few months before the warranty ran out.
It appears that a compression fitting on this last mixer has gone bad. The part where you attach the paddle/whisk/hook just completely fell off the mixer--not just the tiny shaft, but the big, round metal part that fits up inside the mixer. That's where the compression fitting is. The part that is acutally attached to the main mixer body has stripped out and can no longer hold onto the piece from the shaft assembly.
Merry Christmas.
To top things off, as I was rolling out the gingerbread cookie dough from the mixer's last stand, my rolling pin started to make a strange crunchy noise. This was the rolling pin I had purchased 19 1/2 years ago when I went away to BYU. I heard the noise and thought, "Man, that sounds like the ball bearings are giving out." Next thing I knew, a bunch of little metal balls came pouring out one end of the rolling pin. I finished my cookies and dumped my rolling pin in the trash.
I took a trip with Zacky to Williams-Sonoma today to get a new rolling pin and to LOOK at their mixers. I have never had a rolling pin without handles, but I bought one today, and I think it is going to make me very happy.
Now I just need to figure out a new mixer. Do I go for the 5th KitchenAid and splurge $30 for the extended warranty? KitchenAids are so pretty, and they don't jump around on the counter like a Bosch. Also, I make WAAAAAAAAAAY more cookie dough than bread, and I'm not sure I'm satisfied with the Bosch cookie dough. But it has been a loooooong time since I have used a Bosch, and 800 watts is nothing to shake a stick at.
Of course, what I would really like to buy is this:The Hobart Commercial countertop model. Only $2035.11. How many KitchenAid mixers could I go through before this was paid for?
Vegas Vacation
We are back from Las Vegas. We never would have chosen it for a vacation destination, but because the timing of their marathon, and the purported "flat and fast" course, it worked out to be our choice. I hadn't been to Las Vegas in about 17 years. My, how things can change. Many beautiful hotels, but so much yucky stuff as well. The yucky stuff was overwhelming to me, and I just wanted to hide.
We stayed at Mandalay Bay, and we pretty much didn't leave the hotel. It was a beautiful place, with about 400 restaurants inside. The attached convention center was the host of the marathon expo, and the start and finish lines were in the parking lot. We drove the course the first day, and then parked the car and didn't use it again until we drove to the airport. Honestly, there was nothing I wanted to do or see in Vegas. If only it had been warm enough for Mandalay to have their beach open.
Some of you think Las Vegas is flat. Overall, it is. Especially if you live somewhere like I do, you could say that Las Vegas is "flatter than..." The marathon organizers had promoted their "flat and fast course." The did not publish the topography of the course until one week before the race. I know why. The course was NOT flat. The first 10 miles of the half and the full were the same course--the strip. We started at Mandalay Bay and ran about 6 1/2 miles north--downhill, at which point we turned around heading south on the strip--uphill. Who makes a 1/2 marathon that has the last 1/2 of the course continuously uphill? The full marathoners took off at Treasure Island and headed west toward the mountains. They were uphill until mile 20. Not rolling hills where your legs get a little reprieve--solidly uphill. Anyway, let's just say that my second half of the race was slower than the first half.
Some people might think of Las Vegas as a warm winter destination. It's not. We came prepared for weather because---wait for it-----we checked the weather forecast! What a concept. 27,600 runners were there, and I think about 10 of them had checked the forecast before packing their bags. Doesn't everyone look at the weather for a place they are going on vacation? The race promoters had advertised an average high temperature of 58 degrees for December 6th. However, because of my higher reasoning skills, I did the math. The race started at 6:15 in the morning, at which time I knew it was not going to be the daily high temperature. With a couple of clicks of the mouse, I learned that the average morning low was 39 degrees. Right there I knew I would not be wearing my shortie shorts and a tank top. But then we went a step further and checked the actual weather, and discovered that a cold front was heading to Vegas--projected morning lows of 32-34 for the days we would be there. So into the suitcase went the tights, gloves, sleeves, hats, jackets. We were perfectly dressed for the weather. But we sure heard a LOT of angry runners complaining about how they didn't know it was going to be so cold. All I could say was DUH!
We had chosen Mandalay Bay for our stay because the race started and ended in its parking lot. Sometimes race logisics are very tricky if you have to wake up super early to take a shuttle to the starting line, or find parking at the finish line, etc. We just stayed in our warm and cozy hotel room until 6 AM, at which time we joined all the suckers out there who had been in the cold for more than an hour. No 32-degree port-a-potty for us at the start line!
Mark had high hopes of qualifying for Boston, but he also knew that this was only his 2nd marathon since getting back into running, and it might not happen. He trained so hard and diligently, and in the end his time was 3:23:29--which is lightning fast. But he needed 3:20:59 to qualify for Boston. So close, but so far away. This was easier to take because the Boston Marathon has already closed its registration for the race in April, and so he wouldn't have been able to run it until April 2011 anyway. He has already registered for the Newport, Oregon Marathon in June, at which time I have no doubt he will shave that 2 1/2 minutes off of his time and be Boston-bound.
I had originally planned to run 1:58:00 for my race. But when I found out a month ago that I had a stress fracture in my tibia, I had to cut my running way back. I hadn't run more than 9 miles in about 6 weeks, and I had been alternating days of running 5-6 miles with swimming for the past few weeks. My Seattle time last summer was 2:22:30, and I knew I could still kill that time. I decided before the race that if I could come in around 2:05 that I would be happy. I started out holding a good 8:45-9:00 pace, but that was on the downhill first half. When we turned uphill at mile 7, I slowed down a bit to 9:30. And then, at mile 11 my IT band decided to cause a problem. I stopped to stretch for about 3 1/2 minutes, and then I started running slowly. I discovered that if I kept at about a 10:30 pace--which made me crazy to run that slowly--I could run with minimal pain. Any faster, and the IT band would force me to stop and walk, and I was determined to NOT WALK the last 2 miles. So I made it. I found a kick in the last 300 yards, and crossed the finish line where my knee promptly gave out. My time was 2:08:45. 14 minutes faster than Seattle. I am registered for the 1/2 in Seattle next summer, and I can't wait to see how fast I can get in the next 6 months.
By the way, I never want to go to Las Vegas again. Except to fly there in order to get to St. George, of course.
We stayed at Mandalay Bay, and we pretty much didn't leave the hotel. It was a beautiful place, with about 400 restaurants inside. The attached convention center was the host of the marathon expo, and the start and finish lines were in the parking lot. We drove the course the first day, and then parked the car and didn't use it again until we drove to the airport. Honestly, there was nothing I wanted to do or see in Vegas. If only it had been warm enough for Mandalay to have their beach open.
Some of you think Las Vegas is flat. Overall, it is. Especially if you live somewhere like I do, you could say that Las Vegas is "flatter than..." The marathon organizers had promoted their "flat and fast course." The did not publish the topography of the course until one week before the race. I know why. The course was NOT flat. The first 10 miles of the half and the full were the same course--the strip. We started at Mandalay Bay and ran about 6 1/2 miles north--downhill, at which point we turned around heading south on the strip--uphill. Who makes a 1/2 marathon that has the last 1/2 of the course continuously uphill? The full marathoners took off at Treasure Island and headed west toward the mountains. They were uphill until mile 20. Not rolling hills where your legs get a little reprieve--solidly uphill. Anyway, let's just say that my second half of the race was slower than the first half.
Some people might think of Las Vegas as a warm winter destination. It's not. We came prepared for weather because---wait for it-----we checked the weather forecast! What a concept. 27,600 runners were there, and I think about 10 of them had checked the forecast before packing their bags. Doesn't everyone look at the weather for a place they are going on vacation? The race promoters had advertised an average high temperature of 58 degrees for December 6th. However, because of my higher reasoning skills, I did the math. The race started at 6:15 in the morning, at which time I knew it was not going to be the daily high temperature. With a couple of clicks of the mouse, I learned that the average morning low was 39 degrees. Right there I knew I would not be wearing my shortie shorts and a tank top. But then we went a step further and checked the actual weather, and discovered that a cold front was heading to Vegas--projected morning lows of 32-34 for the days we would be there. So into the suitcase went the tights, gloves, sleeves, hats, jackets. We were perfectly dressed for the weather. But we sure heard a LOT of angry runners complaining about how they didn't know it was going to be so cold. All I could say was DUH!
We had chosen Mandalay Bay for our stay because the race started and ended in its parking lot. Sometimes race logisics are very tricky if you have to wake up super early to take a shuttle to the starting line, or find parking at the finish line, etc. We just stayed in our warm and cozy hotel room until 6 AM, at which time we joined all the suckers out there who had been in the cold for more than an hour. No 32-degree port-a-potty for us at the start line!
Mark had high hopes of qualifying for Boston, but he also knew that this was only his 2nd marathon since getting back into running, and it might not happen. He trained so hard and diligently, and in the end his time was 3:23:29--which is lightning fast. But he needed 3:20:59 to qualify for Boston. So close, but so far away. This was easier to take because the Boston Marathon has already closed its registration for the race in April, and so he wouldn't have been able to run it until April 2011 anyway. He has already registered for the Newport, Oregon Marathon in June, at which time I have no doubt he will shave that 2 1/2 minutes off of his time and be Boston-bound.
I had originally planned to run 1:58:00 for my race. But when I found out a month ago that I had a stress fracture in my tibia, I had to cut my running way back. I hadn't run more than 9 miles in about 6 weeks, and I had been alternating days of running 5-6 miles with swimming for the past few weeks. My Seattle time last summer was 2:22:30, and I knew I could still kill that time. I decided before the race that if I could come in around 2:05 that I would be happy. I started out holding a good 8:45-9:00 pace, but that was on the downhill first half. When we turned uphill at mile 7, I slowed down a bit to 9:30. And then, at mile 11 my IT band decided to cause a problem. I stopped to stretch for about 3 1/2 minutes, and then I started running slowly. I discovered that if I kept at about a 10:30 pace--which made me crazy to run that slowly--I could run with minimal pain. Any faster, and the IT band would force me to stop and walk, and I was determined to NOT WALK the last 2 miles. So I made it. I found a kick in the last 300 yards, and crossed the finish line where my knee promptly gave out. My time was 2:08:45. 14 minutes faster than Seattle. I am registered for the 1/2 in Seattle next summer, and I can't wait to see how fast I can get in the next 6 months.
By the way, I never want to go to Las Vegas again. Except to fly there in order to get to St. George, of course.
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