August 3, 2006 at 11:55 pm · Filed under Travel / lifestyle musings
A few days ago when were browsing around Colorado Springs I spotted an interesting looking restaurant called “The Edelweiss” (shouldn’t it be “Der Edelweiss”?). Tonight, Arthur and Allison proposed taking us there. They spent a few years in Germany and gained an appreciation for German food. Plus I could not recall ever having been to a German restaurant so it was worth going just to try.
The food was indeed good, and it was a nice way to wrap a nice week of visiting. Of course, I didn’t do much this week other than work on the dining room table, but Eleanor and Emma got to see a fair bit of Colorado Springs. There’s still more to check out, but we plan to be through here again next spring and hopefully I’ll be less busy with work.
Emma, Allison, and Hannah at the zoo
I think part of what made this week so pleasant is having the Airstream as our home base. Visiting people can be so stressful when you are under their roof. Their household rules apply, not yours. It’s easy to feel like an imposition, taking up a bedroom or the couch in the den, eating your host’s food, taking up space. With the Airstream we were free to come and go as we pleased, sleep in if we felt like it, have breakfast in our home, and generally stay out of the way. So at the end of a week of visiting, nobody felt tense from “too much togetherness”. I doubt we would have stayed a week otherwise.
Tomorrow we are heading up into the mountains. “Up” is relative, since we are already between 6000 and 7000 feet, but for the next two weeks we will be even higher, in the cooler air. This will be our last move west for a while…
August 2, 2006 at 6:46 pm · Filed under Uncategorized
Sorry I’ve been offline. The in-laws offered to take Emma for an overnight with her cousin, and Eleanor and I took the evening off to go out on a date. I figured if I’m taking an evening off from being a parent, I can take an evening off from being a blogger, too.
With a dining room table and high-speed Internet available to me, I decided to get back to Operation Kill Paper, which was last conducted in December back in San Diego. The plan is to reduce this:
… to this:
I found that most of the paper can be trashed immediately. It’s amazing how much paper we had in the files that we really didn’t need. I spent much of yesterday and today scanning the rest, and earmarking things to be dropped off in storage when we get back to Vermont.
Getting rid of the paper is a job, too. It’s all sensitive data, filled with account numbers, tax ID #s, SS #s, etc. Shredding it all is out of the question — I have enough to overheat any shredder, and shredding takes too long anyway. We’ll burn it tomorrow night in the campfire ring.
People often say how “brave” we are for tossing the paper in favor of scanned images. But really, this is much safer. A fire or water leak in the trailer would probably result in total loss of our paper files. Once scanned, however, I have multiple copies and can re-print any document in seconds. One copy of everything will be on my laptop, another on Eleanor’s laptop, a third on my backup hard drive, and a fourth copy will be burned to CD and mailed offsite for ultimate security.
Moreover, I don’t have to worry about someone coming in the trailer and stealing documents for purposes of identify theft (not that I was really concerned in the first place). I can easily encrypt the entire folder of “scanned documents” so that nobody but Eleanor and I can view them — better than a safe!
The only downside of this is the initial job of scanning a few years worth of documents. We brought documents (mostly tax records) going back to 2003. I have invested several days, counting the time back in San Diego, getting all that paper reduced to electrons. Going forward it should be much easier, since I scan new incoming documents every couple of weeks, and also because we are receiving much less paper these days than before we started full-timing.