RTDL2

Monday, July 28, 2008

Back Pipe Intervention.

posted by Jaitu at 17:20

We had another entire week of inactivity on the conservatory front last
week. We had a plumber out today to remove our inside/outside tap and
turn it in to an outside/outside tap. We're told there should be people
coming to begin the plastering tomorrow and everything should be done
within the next two weeks. Other than the plastering we have the screed
floor and tiling to be completed. I suspect that Nuglas will have
forgotten that they said that they will lay our floor tiles as they have
been unaware of other details within the agreed plan of work thus far.
Hopefully they will prove me wrong and we will get this thing completed
before we hit the twelve month mark in just under three weeks from now.

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Thursday, July 17, 2008

Room Going Spare.

posted by Jaitu at 08:56

With now less than a week to go before my Mother-In-Law arrives for a
month long visit the 'guest bedroom' is almost complete. What was our
spare/computer/storage room has been transformed into our new favourite
room in the house. Gone is the exercise bike, the enormous computer
desk, the shelving units and the insane number of boxes and bags. Gone
too are the sunshine yellow walls, the battered formerly beige (?)
carpet and the graduated purple curtains. Now we have a calm neutral
space. Plain cream walls and carpet, a new sofa-bed, new light shades
and lamps, fitted blinds in the window to control glare and provide some
privacy, clean coving and replacement door handles. Last night we put up
a new brown suede roman blind to provide full blackout. All that's left
to find is a chest of drawers to go in there and we're about done.
Finding this last piece of furniture has proven far more difficult than
expected though with many hours browsing both online stores as well as
real world bricks and mortar shops. No doubt we'll find something
suitable but with only a handful of days to go, and a friends wedding
occupying a large chunk of this weekend, time is tight.

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Friday, July 11, 2008

Happy (not) Birthday

posted by Jaitu at 07:41

That's a Happy Birthday but not for today rather than an unHappy Birthday.
This morning my Wife noticed that there had been a few posts here in recent weeks and was disappointed to note that none of them were to wish her a Happy Birthday. So, to put things right while assuaging her paranoia over personal details online...

Happy 31st Birthday to my Wife for sometime in the past.

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Monday, July 07, 2008

It's Mostly A Conservatory. Mostly.

posted by Jaitu at 15:47

After the aforementioned delay the chaps turned up last Wednesday and
set to work on erecting the uPVC framework and glazing. By all accounts
they worked pretty tirelessly until Friday and now have the majority of
a conservatory in place.
All that's left to do is:
Lay the screed floor.
Tile the screed floor.
Wire the sockets and ceiling lights.
Relocate the formerly outdoor tap to the new outdoors.
Remove the botched dryer vent.
Make good the botched dryer vent.
Fit a new dryer vent.
Plaster the walls.
Fix and secure the new roof water down pipe.
Not in that order but I think that's it.

It really is a pity that this has been such a nightmare. The product
that Nuglas supply (the actual uPVC and glazing) is great, the fitting
that they themselves do is faultless. Unfortunately the unending delays
and poor communication as well as some of the sub-contracted work mean
there is no way we could ever recommend them.

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Thursday, July 03, 2008

Driver

posted by ElDiablo at 02:21

We never had a car in my family. To this day neither my dad nor my mum hold a driving license. I never really needed it myself to go through my time in high school and university, luckily both were located in central Madrid, a mere 15min tube ride from home. I grew up completely uninterested in driving. My feelings towards cars where of detached ambivalence: I was able to appreciate the line of say a Porsche Carrera but wasn't curious about what it would be like driving that one or any other motor vehicle. As a result I never got my driving license. With time your circumstances and your mindset change. I started to realise that although owning and maintaining a car can be expensive, at time pointless an more often than not a pain in the backside, it also gives you freedom of movement to travel around, visit places and widen your options when deciding where to live or how to commute to work. My sister figured this out quicker than me and became a driver ten years ago. 

So, I promised myself that getting my license was the first thing I was going to do once I moved back to Madrid. True to my word I joined a driving school by the end of May, went to theory classes for a month and passed the written test at the traffic agency a couple of weeks ago. After that I had to wait for about a week for the school to find me a gap in their driving instruction schedule, but finally, at last, I was going to sit behind a steering wheel (with the intention to use it) for the first time in my life. I was excited, really up for it. They had booked me for a 45min mid-morning driving instruction session, daily, starting on Friday 27 July. 

That day I turned up early at the pick up place and waited in the blazing heat for the liveried school car with the number plate I had been given. After a while, on time, a spankingly new antracite-grey Renault Clio matching the description passed by and pulled over a few meters down the road. The driver, a young woman got out, so did the passenger, a wizened old man, probably already over sixty, with a buzz cut and and boxer's nose. The woman left and I crossed the street and introduced myself to my new instructor. He squinted at me, with an annoyed expression in his face: "Did they book you with me? For now? Pfff, sure, why not, maybe I'll be able to rest once I'm dead." I thought "either the idiots at the driving school didn't tell him or this guy is a bit peculiar." He beckoned me into the car. We got in, I fastened my seatbelt and adjusted the seat and the mirrors while he noted down my details. Still writing and without taking his eyes from his notebook he went: "Don't believe you are very clever and can do this, you can't, you are nothing, you are zero, less than zero, zero to the left - but you might eventually learn how, if you abandon that pride." WTF?? Baffled, I nevertheless nodded in agreement, then he continued: "Driving a car is not easy. Easy is to use a pen, but then you can't kill someone with a pen." Obviously he hadn't seen Casino. But it was a fair point so again I agreed visibly. Also informed him this was the very first time I was going to handle a motor vehicle: "This is your first time ever? Really? But do you know the controls of a car, at least?" I said I knew the theory, what they were for and so on. "Good, then start it, put first gear and off we go." That was all in the way of preparation/explanation/anything, I must have looked as if I wanted a baptism of fire. As I stalled the car twice trying to join the traffic he chuckled: "You were not lying when you said you had never done this before, my God!" Luckily he decided he'd better give me a clue about how to get out of there: "Ease off the clutch slowly! And don't accelerate that much!" Finally we managed to be off and running. As we slowly approached General Perón my feeling was of absolute lack of control over the car, the accelerator too sensitive, not to mention the brake, and the clutch a device designed by a madman who obviously wanted to make learning to drive a car as easy as chewing your own elbow. We turned right onto Dulcinea, at which point I realised I had no idea how to switch on the indicators, thought for an instant about looking for the switch on the dashboard but gave up immediately for fear the distraction made me drive the car into the back of the van in front. In the meantime, my instructor kindly passed on his first impressions about my potential: "Forget about taking the exam before September, no way". As the car stuttered forward at the green light and into the scarily busy Raimundo Fernandez Villaverde I got the first earful from the less than sympathetic drivers behind me. We followed towards Reina Victoria and the less busy streets near Ciudad Universitaria. I relaxed a bit and tried to concentrate more on using the pedals correctly. Not that my instructor would let me: "What do we do when, like now, we are approaching a pedestrian walking on the road? In this case, being blonde and with legs like those we look at her - I know at my age I shouldn't but what the hell...", then he continued in a more philosophical vein: "It is very difficult to find a good woman, so if you happen to run into one, don't let her go." Which is great advice but I'd have rather have him giving me some constructive tips about car handling. After that I kind of mentally shut him away but some of his gems about nothing in particular still reached me, things like "People don't kill other people because they are communists. They do it because they try to impose their beliefs on others" or "Boy, do I not like homosexual behaviour" (don't ask me). This lasted for twenty minutes or so, during which I gingerly negotiated my way through several traffic lights, roundabouts and intersections without much help coming from the passenger seat apart from the one you could find in a motivational essay written by Travis Bickle. Actually I'm being a bit harsh, he probably saved us from having several accidents by correcting my leaden-footed action on the pedals without me noticing. Eventually we managed to get back to the school, and once home and dry he offered his verdict: "You might let yourself be guided but you are not that malleable, it would be different if you were younger, sadly at your age the clay has started to set." 

Which I guess I should take he means I am not completely hopeless but will have to work looong and hard - and endure many, many more sessions with this my new pontificating companion

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Tuesday, July 01, 2008

No Conservatory: Update

posted by Jaitu at 09:38

We were supposed to have our conservatory guys attend site today to put
in the framework and start on the glazing. With dull inevitability I had
a phone call to say that there has been some kind of problem with the
frame and they won't be coming until tomorrow. It's been ten and a half
months so far so I don't know why I should expect things to start
happening on time now. So far the company who shall remain nameless
(Nuglas Southern Limited) have missed every date and broken every
promise. Other than that, and the air of indifference whenever I call, I
cannot recommend them highly enough.

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