Thursday, 25 December 2014

December 25, 2014

Non-stop rain.  More like the day Noah launched the ark than Christmas Day.

My veranda almost completely flooded.

However, the tree is safe and dry.






Since it is Christmas Day and everyone is just sitting around opening presents and eating, I thought I would take you on a opening tour of my now not so new place.  Here we go:


The veranda (not yet flooded) from the breakfast table.  Great hammock and exercise space.
My breakfast table
The view from my breakfast table

The view out my front windows

The alcove at the front

A perfect place for puppets to hang out

The dining room.  Lots of built in shelving

The living room.  French doors lead out to the veranda on the right
Opposite side of the living room.  Now you can see the veranda
Another side of the living room with the door to the office to the right

The entry way

The kitchen

The garden view from the kitchen window

More kitchen

And again

Entering the office, the day bed

The nerve centre

Here endeth today's tour.  More to come.  Have to hang my laundry now and put it under a fan or it will never dry.

Merry Christmas!

Tuesday, 23 December 2014

December 23, 2014

The party went well.  We were about 20.  The tree got mostly decorated.  I have to finish the last of it today.  Mostly thanks to Jez and Kaneeza's son Kian who is 5.  He did a great job.  Only one decoration broken in the process.

There was one scary moment during the prep when the gas cylinder ran out.  Sam, my tuktuk man, saved the day.  He came in the pouring rain and replaced the spent cylinder.   After that it was clear sailing.

The rain continues unabated.  One group set themselves up in a conversation circle around one of the drips on the veranda.  As everyone kept repeating, "Show me a house in Sri Lanka that doesn't leak."

It really felt like home having a tree decorating party again.  I have missed it the last 2 Christmases.  So blessed with my friends.

Here are a few pics:

The bar on the veranda being used as a bar again.

The veranda where the furniture had to be set up around the leaks.

The buffet

Dessert, tea and coffee

Veenitha cooking.  I couldn't have done it without her.  She also christened her bedroom as she stayed the night.  I am hoping she gets used to it and decides to move in.

Sunday, 21 December 2014

December 21, 2014

Did all the final marketing for the party yesterday in the pissing rain.  I am starting to quack.  Then came home and finished the cooking.  Not very traditional fare, but hopefully it will be good:

hummus
tsatziki
baba ganoush
quacamole
olive tapanade
pita
naan
crackers
all manner of Kandyan short eats (savoury pastries)
3 kinds of fruit cake
local chocolates (we'll see what they are like.  I bought a packet of 5 Ferrero Rochet for a treat for me)
wine
juice

Everything but the juice (although I will make some watermelon juice myself) and the baked goods are made from scratch at home.  A bit of work but worth it in the end.

Am expecting about 25 people which is quite respectable.  Hopefully the rain will hold off at least for the hours of the party so we can use the veranda.

I got the tree up and tried the lights only to find they do not work no matter what I do.  I guess you can expect to get only one season out of them.  As Sri Lankans always remind you, anything Chinese is junk, and everything here is made in China.  Good thing I checked them as I will have time today to get a new set of lights and get them up.

After all that, I finally took a shower to wash the dirt and sweat of Kandy town off me and was having my lunch around 1700 when Sonali called to say she was dropping over.  She was followed quickly by Lalindra who was at loose ends as his wife was off at the British Council Christmas party which was a pirate theme.  He dd not want to dress up.  I can't blame him.  Pirates are OK for Halloween, or any other time of the year really, but not for Christmas.  I think the director of the British Council, who came up with the idea, is 10 years old.

After some wine and an overall assessment of the sorry state of the Sri Lankan economy and politics, we ended up at the Grand Kandyan (new garish Chinese brothel type hotel) for dinner.  We had phoned ahead to the manager hoping to get sushi.  He gave us the usual blah blah about being able to give us sushi but it would take a long time.  I don't even think the sushi chef was there.  In the end, we ended up having Thai food in the Indian restaurant.  The decor was a mix of early airport restaurant with Greek bas relief pictures and discount restaurant furniture.  The music was bad 70s pop played on an old stereo set up on a table and chairs off to one side.  All in keeping with the general lack of taste in the decor of the whole place.  However, the food was magnificent.  Turns out they have a chef from Thailand who we dragged out of the kitchen to compliment him.  A sweet diminutive Thai fellow.

The flavours were subtle and not over done.  Just excellent from the soup right through to the banana fritters at the end.  After soup, green papaya salad, 3 main dishes and dessert, we paid Rs.1100, about C$10 for our meal.  Definitely an experience we will repeat even if we have to shut our eyes to get through the lobby to get to the restaurant.

We got them to give us a look at one of the rooms after dinner.  More of the same, except this room was done in the garish Arabic style.  If they had any more gold paint or gold accents, I would have thought I was in Fort Knox.  It would be frightening to wake up to all that glare in the morning.

Friday, 12 December 2014

December 12, 2014

Dusted off my walking poles and used them for the first time since I got here; for walking that is.  I have been using the resistance bands for exercise all along.  Walking with them was great.  Kandy is very hilly.  In fact, it is almost impossible to find a level bit of road.  The poles really help propel you up the hills.

I also took the electric tricycle for a test run.  It works very well, but it scared the crap out of me.  As I said, Kandy is very hilly.  That makes it difficult to get the thing started.  Add to that the fact that the trike is cambered to make it easier to corner and you have a recipe for disaster.  It is slightly more stable than a two wheeler, but not enough for me.  It is still very tippy.  So I have decided not to buy it.  Between my lack of balance, the hills and the crazy drivers, I am sure to land in the hospital.  I think I will just use my walking poles instead.

Very nice Christmas book club this month.  We went to one of the member's homes and had a lovely potluck lunch and a secret Santa gift exchange.  In the end there was no secret about the Santa as either people guessed who had bought the present or people declared themselves.

We are in the midst of a presidential election.  The sitting president seemed to have no opposition until about 3 weeks ago when the General Secretary of his party as well as his health minister jumped ship along with some of his senior cabinet ministers.  Now we have a contest.  That is good news for a place that is now essentially a dictatorship.  The bad news is that the election will be violent.  It has already started and will get progressively worse until election day on January 8.

My visa hangs in limbo until after the election as most government workers and millions of treasury rupees are being diverted into the President's election campaign.  There is no effort to hide the fact that this is being done.  We live in a true banana republic.

Have decided to have a house warming/tree trimming party.  It is set for December 22.  If everyone were to show up, there would be over 50 people.  Luckily, a lot of people are away, so it should be a manageable crowd.

Wednesday, 3 December 2014

December 3, 2014

Life has gone back to much of its normal pace now that the cleaning is done.  Of course, there is the normal cleaning cycle, but that is maintenance and it is comparatively easy.  I have let my second maid go.  There was just not enough work.  There are a lot of pluses:

1.  I save money.
2.  Veenitha is much happier.  I think she thought that I thought that her work was inadequate or that I wanted to replace her.  On the day she came after I had let Rani go, she went through this place like a whirlwind.  Usually she is quite slow but not that day.
3.  We have been discovering that Rani didn't do much of a job in any event.  The servants' toilet was stinky.  Veenitha had to give it a good scrub and douse it with vinegar.  The knife handles were covered in mold because she had not washed them properly.
4.  Although I had agreed to pay her Rs.700 because she had to provide her own food, she would always sneak in something to eat from the fridge.
5.  She was really moody.
6.  She chewed paan, a combination of areca nut, betel leaf and lime.  It is a disgusting habit.  God only knows where she spat it out.

So we are much better off without her.

The rains have moved into a more regular monsoon like pattern.  Sun in the morning with heavy rain, lightning and thunder in the late afternoon and evening.  It remains cool which is great.

Here are a few pics I took while Sandy was still here. 

These are all of Embeke temple.  This started out as a Buddhist temple but is now dedicated to the 6 headed war god Kataragama.  There are quite a few temples dedicated to Kataragama throughout the country, the most famous being in the south where there is a huge festival drawing thousands of pilgrims every year.  The carvings are exquisite.  This is a very small temple, but one of the nicest I have seen.






This is the Seema Malaka in Beira Lake in Colombo.  The temple was designed by Geoffrey Bawa, Sri Lanka's premier architect.  This too is a small but exquisite temple.


Still nothing on the visa front.  I have adopted a whole new attitude about this.  Que sera sera.  Something will develop over the next couple of weeks.

Sonali surprised me with a lovely birthday party at Theva, a very nice restaurant in Hanthana.  Hanthana is in the hills to the north west of Kandy.  It used to be a tea plantation but is now mostly homes. 

I knew that she was planning to take me out to dinner and that Mike and Rushma wanted to join us, but in the end Amal came, the Kawasakis who rarely come out after dark and Zhara and her brother.  It was a great evening.  The food was very good.  The setting exceptional.  I got presents and a fabulous marzipan cake that I had had my eye on for a while.  All in all a very nice 62nd.



Thursday, 20 November 2014

November 20, 2014

Very sad.  I took my little Ferdinand in to be neutered this morning, only to be phoned around 1300 saying he had died while being given the anesthetic.  They think he may have internal injuries from getting into a cat fight, but he was perfectly fine this morning.  This is my second cat to have died at that place.  I think there is something going on there that is not good.  I will never take another of my animals there again.

Wednesday, 19 November 2014

November 19, 2014

Sandy went back to Bangkok early this morning. We had found a B&B in a very central location in Colombo. It was okay but the breakfast was not really good, eg. the coffee was instant, the bathroom drain backed up, the power to the bedroom lights and overhead fan went out, they gave me grokoka powder instead of tea this morning twice. 

No joy on the visa front. I went to see my friend Yvonne who messed up the visa the last time and who still owes me money. We made up and since she had already paid the immigration officer the last time, I have given her all the paper work to see if he will issue the visa this time for which he has already been paid. Let's see. Otherwise, I am going to let my visa expire and work on getting my ducks in a row for the My Dream Home scheme that will give me a 2 year window. Or in the alternative I may be moving to Vietnam sooner than I thought. 

Saturday, 15 November 2014

November 15, 2014

My friend Sandy Mackenzie from Vancouver arrived early on the morning of November 5.  I went down with the driver to fetch him.  Of course, the flight was late.  All international flights get in in the wee hours of the morning.  His was due at 0055 but landed at 0245.  By the time we drove up to Kandy we had lost an entire night's sleep.  Although I got some good snoozing in on the way down and in the airport parking lot.  We caught a few zzzzzs on the drive back as well.  In the end, we managed to stay up until a reasonable time so our clocks adjusted quite easily.

It has been nice to have Sandy here.  He is a seasoned and independent traveller so is quite happy to go off on his own.  We went together to the the Temple of the Dental Shakedown (Temple of the Tooth Relic or Maligawa) as well as the Peradeniya Botanical Gardens.  I have not seen either for 25 years.  The Temple was fine but not as interesting as when I saw it last.  They have removed the giant rock bee hives that used to hang from the eaves in the main building.  The Gardens, on the other hand, are magnificent.  Sadly, the giant fig tree that sits on the Great Lawn is dying.  It has lost about half its height and some major branches have also been cut below the canopy. 

The only fly in the ointment is the manner in which tourists are being ripped off.  At the Maligawa a resident gets in for free.  A foreigner has to pay Rs.1,000.  At the Gardens, a resident pays Rs.50 while a foreigner pays Rs.1100.  The amounts are not huge, but the differential is gigantic.  I am sure no-one minds paying 10% or even 15% more, but no-one wants to be ripped off to the tune of 1000%.  Add to that the fact that the government has put hotel prices up out of sight and Sri Lanka becomes a more and more unattractive tourist destination.

Went to Film Club on October 27.  Unfortunately, this is the last one for a while as the place where we have it is coming into their busy season.  It was great.  The movie was Blue Jasmine.  Very Woody Allen, but Cate Blanchett was fabulous.  The venu is a boutique hotel out at the gold course called Bougainvillea.   Beautifully kept place with a lovely infinity pool dropping off to the lake in the middle of the course.  A private theatre room and many other amenities.  The hostess is a lovely woman.  Coffee before the film, lunch after that was great and then the discussion.  All for Rs.1300.  All together a lovely idea.  Hope we can find an alternative venue so we don't have to wait until March or April to get back to it.

Book club continues on however.  This was the view of the river the other day.  An old man slowly paddling his outrigger filled with cattle grass.  I love these scenes of life that has not changed in centuries.


Ferdinand continues to reek havoc.  The other day he pooped in the middle of the sofa.  Luckily, I had been meaning to wash those cushion covers anyway.  Then last night he disappeared.  I found that he was trapped between our house and the neighbouring house.  He was pinned down by Patches who I think he had been trying to mate with.  There was a lot of growling going on.  I tried to get Patches to move, but no luck.  Then I called my landlady who shooed Patches away.  In the end, Patches ended up on top of a wall at the end of a ledge with Ferdinand pinned below her.  I had to climb out on to the ledge, walk over to the wall and scare Patches away.  At that point, Ferdinand jumped up on to the wall.  It was just a little bit too high so all I could reach were his paws.  In the end, I got hold and managed to drag him down.  He was scared and tried to grab any toe hold, but to his credit, he never tried to claw or bite me.  He knew I was trying to help.  Of course, when he came back in the house it was as if nothing happened.  Here he is being the furry supervisor this morning.






Skyped with my friend Rod Germaine the other day.  He is in Oaxaca, Mexico while I am here in Kandy.  It was like being in the same room together.  This technology is amazing.

Sandy and I are both off to Colombo on Monday.  I need to do the visa thing again and he will look around the city before he goes back on the 19th.  Tomorrow is my birthday.  62!  Can hardly believe it.  I have done things this year that I have never done before in my life.  Like walking out on a ledge 20 feet up for one thing.  Every year a new adventure.


Sunday, 2 November 2014

November 2, 2014

I was just reflecting on all the adventures in cleaning I have had since moving into my new place.  Getting stuck inside the closet.  Veenitha was there but it was a real challenge to explain to her what to do when we couldn't see each other.  I rely a lot on sign language.  Cursing the furniture maker every time I had to put a bed together.  Yesterday it was the queen in preparation for my friend Sandy's arrival from Vancouver.  1.5 hours of fuck, fuck, fuck!  Discovering that vinegar can solve any cleaning problem and much more.

Cleaning is almost done in the main part of the house.  Only the back hallway and the veranda left which will be finished tomorrow.  Then the third bedroom and bathroom are all that is left.  I will wait until Sandy leaves before I tackle those.

Went to a party last night to discover when I got home that Ferdinand had shredded part of my mosquito net and had crapped in my bedroom again.  I have to devise a way he can get out without another cat coming in.  So it is back to net art with my cat.


Saturday, 25 October 2014

October 25, 2014

My little Dharma died today one year ago, so it is wonderful that Ferdinand came into my life just three days ago.  Like they say when a door closes, a window opens.

Introducing Ferdinand!







Yesterday was a trying day.  First of all Veenitha phoned saying she wasn't coming as she had to go to Colombo.  So I was on my own for the big kitchen clean up.  Then the plumber was supposed to come at 0800 to repair the new leaks in the guest bathroom and didn't show up.  His phone was off when I tried to call.  When I finally reached him at 1500, it turns out he was in Kurunagala.  Why don't they call and tell you these things?

Then the carpenter showed up to install the new front door lock.  He seemed to be making good progress until he broke the key off in the lock.  He failed to understand that once the key is broken in the lock, the only thing to do is drill the lock.  I finally managed to explain this to him at which point, he began drilling with a common wood bit.  It took me some time to explain to him that he needed a bit that would drill metal.  Finally, he went off to buy a new locking piece and a drill bit.  Meantime, we have the deluge of the century with lightning and thunder.  But to his credit he showed up despite the fact that I was sure he wouldn't.  He had left the front door off its hinges, so it was fairly critical.

He comes back with the drill bit, but it turns out that guys at the shop are just as ignorant as he is and sold him another wood bit which broke in short order.  It is a good thing he did not fuse all the electrics in the house while he was at it.  Even after that the thing would not come out.  We all worked on it for quite a while in the dusk now, so seeing was a bit of a problem.  Then I suggested that we flip the door and try from the other side.  Lo and behold, the son got it out in an instant after that.

Now I have a nice new door lock, but the unit is silver and the lock itself is gold.  I pointed this out to them saying that if the entire thing is silver, why would you get a gold lock.  They just stared at me.  So gold it will stay.  I am not taking the risk of changing it again and something going wrong.  A testament to Sri Lankan "skill".  Ha, ha!

A new hotel has opened in Kandy called the Grand Kandyan, owned largely by the ruling family.  We went to a concert and dinner the other night.  The lobby and the events floor are decorated like the inside of a Chinese bordello.  Here is just one example.  This is the grandfather clock that sits in the lobby.  Not like any grandfather I ever knew.

The chairs in the lobby would make Louis XIV blush they are covered in so much silver and gold gilt.  The chairs on the events floor are crushed red velvet with gold legs and crystal buttons.  Sonali and I are going to go back just to critique the decor.

The "concert" consisted of a local band, an impersonator who did Elvis, Michael Jackson, and Tina Turner.  Here's Tina.  He had pretty good legs, but his fishnets had a huge hole and run in them that he didn't seem to notice.  He was Sri Lankan but living in Germany.  He looked like the caste of men in India who are raised as women.  He probably had to move to Germany to come out and live a normal life.




Here we are waiting for the concert to start which was almost a late beginning.  We heard about it because Sonali's cousin was also performing.  It was terrible overall, but beggars can't be choosers.  After all this is Sri Lanka, and Kandy to boot.  Nothing ever comes here, so we take advantage of whatever comes along.

Lakshmi, Sonali's Mother and Sonali.


All the chairs were decked out like this. 

Even the most elaborate wedding planner could not come up with this.  They must be planning to cater to the Muslim wedding crowd.
The good news is that the buffet dinner included a sushi bar which was quite good with great sashimi.  Both Sonali and I spoke to the sushi chef so we can look forward to more sushi in the future.  Plus it turns out that Sonali knows the Chairman and General Manager of the hotel and even I have met him once, so he said he would arrange sushi whenever we want it.

I don't know if you can make out the back end of the elephant.  I got this on Katusgatota Road, the main drag close to my new place while buying my new commode (toilet).  This was the fourth day of toilet frustration.  I took the elephant to be a good omen.

Went to lunch at a friends house on Thursday.  She is Spanish from Majorca, married to a Sri Lankan guy.  Sandy, the husband, did all the cooking and it was fabulous.  Wonderful Spanish cheeses, smoked sheep and some kind of goat cheese, wine, a wonderful Spanish fritatta,  a great fish stew/soup and wonderful pudding for dessert.  The company was good too.

Then it was off to the Kawasaki's for what I thought was pie.  Turns out it was arugula pie which was actually lunch.  They had waited for me until 1630 with lunch, so I couldn't not eat.  So in the end, I had 2 lunches.  It never rains but it pours.

I got home late to find Ferdinand bursting at the seams to go to the bathroom.  I have gotten rid of the litter box after a day as they use plain sand here and it really stinks.  I was so proud of him for waiting for me to come home.  Then yesterday morning he shit in my bed.  Not so proud now.

Tuesday, 21 October 2014

October 21, 2014

Day two.  I got myself a pussy cat.  He is a kitten who I have named Ferdinand.  My friends the Kawasakis' cat found him and brought him home and now seems to have thought better of it.  I don't know how old he is, but I think too young to be fixed yet, but house trained.

Here's one for my feminist friends.  The university veterinary hospital will not neuter male cats, only females.  Males don't need it!  How's that for sexist?

No pics yet as he has just now come home and is hiding on one of the dining room chairs.

More later.

Monday, 20 October 2014

October 20, 2014

First night staying in my new place.  Not finished yet, but enough to stay overnight.

Got into the shower after another day cleaning only to think that the instant hot water wasn't working.  Discovered that it was operator error.  It came on after I fiddled with the knobs and got the right combination  Now showered and having a bite to eat.  Risotto courtesy of Sonali.

Am too pooped to write about all my adventures of the last few days.  Will do that tomorrow.

Just wanted to record my first night.

Monday, 13 October 2014

September 27 published October 13, 2014


Today’s excitement was a trip to the lumber yard. As I was moving, I discovered that the board that makes up the box of my bed had warped because the span between supports was too wide. The solution is to attach some slats and then lay the board over them. We needed wood for the slats.

There are lumber shops here, but not like in Canada. The wood is not uniform and it has been ripped but not planed let alone sanded. I thought that we would be going to one of these places where I would have to hunt and peck to fine 7 pieces the same size. Happily, we went to a saw mill that is located right in the middle of Katusgatota town. Zoning seems to be unknown here.

We give the specs for what we want. The carpenter came with me, or rather I went with him. Good thing too, as you will see. After giving the info in the office, we go into the yard to try to find something that fits the bill. The yard is like an ant hill. Huge mahogany logs awaiting cutting, some being cut, lorries waiting to be loaded with cut timber or the bark leavings, and everywhere swarming with workers. Wood is piled everywhere rather haphazardly so that the working area is becoming less and less.

Finally, we find some suitable wood which has been cut into planks. Despite the fact that we have given our requirements to the office and the man there has written it down, they try to give us just the planks as they are. I explain another 6 or 7 times what I want. Finally, they realize that I can’t be fobbed off, so we proceed into the cutting room to have the planks ripped, planed and cut to size.

Here is another sight. There are 2 stations both of which can perform all three functions. There are 3 workers; 2 manning one station, and one the other.  They are all in bare feet, no goggles, no ear protection, no hard hats, no gloves, no masks, and loose clothing to boot. A workers’ comp inspectior would have an apoplectic fit if they saw this.

There are piles of sawdust every where. Air ventilation, hah! They wouldn’t even know what you were talking about.

Now we start in on the planks. They start by cutting the plank in half. The first plank is just about 8¼” wide. The next plank is about 7”. They seem to think that is no problem, despite the fact that I asked for the slats to be 3½” wide. Next problem is the thickness. Although I might let them get away with the width, the thickness is crucial as this is for a bed box and I am like the Princess and the Pea, even the smallest speck keeps me awake, let alone sleeping on an undulating box. That is the very problem I am trying to fix.

So now I have to get them to plane the pieces. They have a mechanism that allows them to set the thickness, but they don't seem to understand what it does. So the first plank comes out close to the 1” that I want, but the second doesn't. So now it is back to the drawing board. I go into the cutting room, get them to give me a tape measure and show them on the tape measure the width I want on every plank. This happens 7 times. Now for the thickness. I get them to set up the machine for 1”. Great, the first plank comes out on the button. Before they put in the second plank, they start messing with the mechanism that controls the size of the cut. I go nuts. With sign language only, as no-one speaks English, I explain that they have to leave the thing at 1”. They look at me like I am crazy, but I am white and a woman, so they obey me. Now we are cooking with gas. Each plank comes out just right. However, I have to measure each one as it comes out of the planer to make sure. So another 7 measures.

Now it is time for the length. This the cutter seems to get. He even has the sense to make sure that the end from which he measures is square. If it isn't he cuts it square before measuring. Everything is going along great until we get to the 6th plank. The cutter has cut one end square. Despite observing this process 7 times, the assistant gives him the non-squared end to do the measure. I watch this to see if any of the other 4 people who are standing around observing this pick it up. No-one does. So I wade into the sawdust once again, and tell them to flip the plank. They are incredulous, so I have to take the square ruler and show them that the end from which the measurement is being taken is not square. They all go aaaah!, nod and look at me like I am Albert Einstein. Not that they know who Einstein is.



 So after 1½ hours, we have the wood we need.

Now we are off to buy screws and door handles. First place we go, they have some handles, but no screws to go with them. The second place looks a lot more organized and I do in fact get what I want, but not until I have gone behind the counter and gone through every drawer to unearth what I need. Of course, the language barrier is a huge factor, but I am sure that even if I knew Sinhala, they would not get it as they have no clue about the product they are selling.

We load the slats into the tuktuk and off we go back to the ranch to do the install.
Moving the wood in the tuktuk

Miracle of miracle, the carpenter has a drill. Of course, he does not have an extension cord, so he gets one from my landlady. The slats have been brought into the bedroom by the carpenter's assistant, his son, who has laid them out in a configuration that is totally different from the one that I had explained at least 3 times the previous day and had drawn on a piece of paper as well. So I start rearranging them only to find that they are still covered with sawdust. So now, they have to be hauled outside to be brushed off. We get them back on the bed where I lay them out as they should be. They start at it. I do not hear any drilling, so I go to check. They are trying to screw the slats into the mahogany frame without pre-drilling. So I tell them they have to drill. Reluctantly, they start setting up the drill in the middle of my bedroom. I tell them they have to drill outside. So they grab a slat and start to head for the covered veranda which might as well be inside. I tell them they have to go into the garden. They don't understand why, but they obey.

After a lot more mucking around, that job is done and it is fine. Now for the door pulls. They start installing one on the veranda door which is mostly glass. I hear no drilling, and the next thing I is hear is pounding. I run to see what is happening before the pane of glass breaks. They are trying to nail in a screw. In the process they have damaged the pull as well. So back to the drawing board explaining about pre-drilling.

Next job is to put some sliding bolts on my bedroom door. They are working away, using the drill this time, so everything seems good. I go to inspect the work, and lo and behold, they have used some ripped up piece of cardboard under the slot. It looks like hell and will not hold once the bold is closed. So that has to come off and now I am looking for a deeper piece that will fit properly.

This all took from 0900 to 1600. I swear, I might as well have done it myself.

To be fair, that is not entirely true, as Veenitha and I did get 3 boxes emptied in that time, but I feel like a baby sitter.

I have had to putty the walls, paint, scrub like the lowliest char, install screening, do carpentry, fix roof leaks, supervise the plumber. I might as well open a vocational school.