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Wednesday, January 11, 2017

The mysterious apartment







I didn't realize it at the time, but I threw some of my Facebook friends into a mild state of confusion when  I started posting about "the apartment" several months ago.  Many of you said, "um, what happened to your house?"  Sorry about the confusion folks! For years, while the family has skied, and especially since The Boy has been on a snowboard team, the family has driven 2 (sometimes 3) hours each way to get to and from the mountains.  We've couch surfed, found last minute deals (or not deals) at hotels, driven through blizzards....and sighed that we "needed" a better solution.  We looked last winter and continued last spring and summer, but as most of you know, seasonal ski rentals are not cheap.  I had a (hilarious?) conversation with a realtor who told me he knew the perfect place--it would only be $40,000 for the season (and he was serious...I don't know who he thought I was though...umm, $40,000?).
In October, we saw a listing for a year rental on an apartment in the little town of Alma.  The price is manageable and better than anyplace else.  The deal-maker was that the landlord said, "Why wouldn't you be able to bring your dogs up?  Everyone up here has dogs..." and the icing on the cake (so to speak) is that it now has a functional washer and dryer. Before you all line up to come stay in our mountain home, here are the details (you can come...just bring a sleeping bag and prepare to be cozy....):
To begin...this is what the car usually looks like when we are all going up:

The cats stay home.  Morrison has a seatbelt and sits in the back seat, Liberty also has a tether/seatbelt, since a few weeks ago she tried to climb over Morrison and the children to sit on Pete's lap while he drove.  Not fun. Liberty gets to sit with a cooler and whatever else we are taking up. I love the look on Morrison's face here....
Looks like this trip the children are holding stuff on their laps.  I'm always holding stuff on my lap, and on my feet and so on (as my mother said once, "all that stuff that goes around a mom's feet, because there isn't anywhere else to put it".  It is a lovely drive up, usually, very scenic and less traffic than I70 usually.  Before the weather turned to winter, we stopped at the famous hot dog for lunch (they have outside tables, so the dogs could "sit") but we usually just drive straight up (or back).


The apartment is in the town of Alma, which advertises itself as "America's HIGHEST Incorporated City". We aren't really sure which way they mean "highest", but we're pretty sure it works on a couple different levels....Situated at 10, 578 feet above sea level, Alma is considered not only an alpine desert, but the climate is considered subartic.  It boasts two dispensaries (one medicinal and one recreational), a Montasorri school, a vet, a bar, a coffee shop, and an estimated year-round population of about 200 people.  (There are, however, approximately 1,000 people living in its "subdivisions"...how ever that works...).  They also have bingo at the town hall on Thursday nights (we haven't made it there on a Thursday), a guy who sells fresh eggs behind the bar, and a couple realtors.  Oh, and the Al-mart...which should get its own post, but I'll just link it here instead...it is my favorite store ever....(Their website seems to be down...but they have a facebook page:  https://www.facebook.com/AlMartGeneralStore/)
Here are a couple pictures of our drive through town, our apartment in on the North side of town and we enter from the south:




We live up  the hill, down a couple dirt roads--here is the road off the main street (This was in October, before it started snowing...)



And here is our road...

And the house that is a permanent fixture on the Air BNB site (possibly a better choice than sleeping bags on our floor, but we haven't checked it our fully yet...)



Our apartment is in the basement of a cute little ranch house, with parking for 1-4 cars, depending on how much snow there is.  So far we've been able to fit the upstair tenant's car and ours in without any problems..if we really had two cars up there, I think one would have to be parked in the "Alma City free parking" down the hill...  We have our own outside entrance, which, now that there is snow, requires us to dig our way into and out of the apartment some days.  (The forest view is incredible though!)

The upstairs of the house uses propane, but we have all electric.   Our apartment only takes up half the basement. The other half may be another apartment someday, but right now is undergoing renovations, the previous tenants from the upstairs left it quite a mess (it connects to the upstairs, but the landlord is in the process of blocking it off and making it another apartment or office space for her).






We have a cute little patio outside the apartment--the pile of trash is gone now, replaced by a lot of snow--Mr. IM says it was quite windy last night as he used our tiny little grill out there!  The deck doesn't extend quite to our door, it ends a few feet before, but there is a large covered area where we now have a couple chairs for when it gets warmer (like in April....)


We did quite a bit of "helping" getting the place habitable--apparently the last tenant in our unit also treated it kind of badly.  The landlord repainted and did a lot of cleaning and trash hauling.  She was still working when we took occupancy, which may be part of the reason we got such a great deal.  It is tiny--Mr. IM and I figure it is no bigger than our first apartment at Purdue, possibly a little smaller (but hard to judge, because the layouts are very different.  There is a full kitchen, no dishwasher, small stove (but all our pans from Purdue's Married Student Housing fit!) and a lot of weird cabinets.  If we lived there all the time I'd figure out some way of using the cabinets better, but they are fine for a "ski place".  The table is perfect for maj jong..




Living room--with our futon where The Girl and Liberty the dog sleep....



There is one bedroom.  This is before we put a mattress on the top and installed hooks and bins to store everything...There is a decent sized closet as well and a nice set of built-in shelves that big "bins" from Dollar Tree fit on perfectly.  The bunk bed is a loaner from the landlord--with it and the futon we are able to sleep five people (as long as they don't mind togetherness)

We've had to be a little creative, the bathroom is tiny and the bedroom doesn't have a door, so we're all learning about changing in the closet and wearing layers.

So there it is--it is very cozy, but it works and we are happy to have found it.  We have a six-month lease, with the option to continue for a year. The six months are up on April 15 and we are seriously considering keeping it through the summer so we can spend some time up there when it isn't snowing :)










































Saturday, January 7, 2017

Top Ten Books (that I read) of 2016

There are actually eleven here-with the links to my review from earlier this year.  I took out a couple of my favorites, because they were sequels and although I loved them, they might not be as fabulous to someone who hadn't read the others. (I left in the Stephanie Plum novel though...)  Enjoy!

January 2016
Water from My Heart (Charles Martin)
Along the Way (Martin Sheen and Emilio Estevez)
The Nightingale (Kristin Hannah)
March:
13 Hours in Benghazi (Mitchell Zuckoff)
The City (Dean Koonz)
May, June, July
The Oregon Trail (Rinker Buck)
October:
Orange is the New Black
The Winter Garden
December: (no link yet, most recent post)
Hostage Taker Stephanie Pintoff
Turbo Twenty-Two Janet Evanovich



Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Books I read in December 2016 (There were a bunch...)

I finally read some books in December...maybe because it was cold?  Or because some weekends (when I'm at the apartment) I don't have internet?  In any case, here's the list:
1.  The Slave Dancer (Paula Fox)--This was one of The Boy's "Junior Great Books" (Middle School book club) books.  I'm not sure with this one, as with many of the others, of what makes it a "great book".  It isn't a bad book, but I didn't love it either.  It is about a young boy in America in the early 1800's who is kidnapped and pressed into service aboard a slave ship.  There is a shipwreck and he is one of only two survivors.  It is allegedly based on a true story, sort of.
2.  The City Baker's Guide to Country Living (Louise Miller)-There was a cute excerpt in Reader's Digest a couple months ago and I requested the book from the library.  It was cute. The main character is a baker who is fired from her hoity-toity baking job in the city and goes to hide out at her best friend's house in the country.  She ends up working at a B and B. There is a love story that is cute and some friendships that are nice.
3.  Hostage Taker (Stephanie Pintoff)-Another book that was featured in Reader's Digest.  A mystery/thriller about a woman who works for the FBI as a hostage negotiator.  There is a sequel (see #5) and supposedly more will be added.  Good story, not predictable.
4.  Twisted (Hannah Jayne)-Picked it up in the teen section of the library while waiting for The Boy.  About a girl whose dad is allegedly a serial killer who disappeared when she was very young.  She has a new identity and a new foster family and there is a mystery.  Good mystery.
5.  City on Edge (Stephanie Pintoff)--Sequel to #3--develops the characters more. Another good suspenseful mystery.
6.  Turbo Twenty-Two (Jane Evanovich)--I was thrilled that my hold on this book became available during break (so I could read it almost in one sitting).  Like the other Stephanie Plum books, this one is a trashy mystery, but so entertaining.  Loved reading about Stephanie and her friends and their latest adventures.
7.  It Is Well (James Shipman)-Meh.  An Amazon reader (or whatever that is called) monthly (free) choice.  About a family in the Western US during WWII.  There was just a lot going on--maybe too much.  It was based on true events in the US, in Europe, and in the Pacific and sometimes felt like the author was trying too hard to connect all the pieces.
8.  Finding Fraser (KC Dyer)-Very cute book. The main character decides that since she is fired from her job at a coffee shop that she will go to Scotland and find a husband, like the Scottish main character from Outlander (Jamie Fraser).  She has lots of misadventures.  It's cute.
9.  See Jane Run (Hannah Jayne)-By the same author as #4.  It was interesting.  The main character thinks that she might have been abducted as a child. There is a mystery, some adventure, and then a solution.  Again, there was a lot going on--it was good, but not spectacular.
10.  Who do You Love?  (Jill Weiner)-Another cute book--seemed to be a lot this month.  Follows two people from they are kids until they are in their 40's.  They live in different towns and have very different lives, but their paths keep crossing.
11. White Picket Fences (Susan Meissner)-I really like Meissner's books, but sometimes the endings have me scratching my head--this was one of those.  It is about a modern family and a World War 2 mystery, but there is also a modern mystery about something that happened to one of the modern teenagers when he was a kid.  There isn't really a connection in the end.
12. A Sound Among the Trees (Susan Meissner)--Another modern story but this one has a Civil War mystery.  The story was really good, but about a third of the book was a Civil War diary.  It was a great story, but hard to follow as a diary. Seemed like a lot of time spent "listening" to one person's point of view instead of following everyone as characters.
13.Night Road (Kristin Hannah)--Really enjoyed this book-- there are a couple twists that I didn't see coming.  It follows a set of twins, the girl twins best friend, and the parents of the twins through high school and their 20's. There is a tragedy in the middle and some resolution very late in the book.  
14.  Take the Key and Lock Her Up (Ally Carter)--Waited a long time to read this--it is the 3rd in the Embassy Row series.  I think it is the last book in the series, although maybe not (it seemed like everything was pretty resolved?).  A quick read and answered "what happened" well.


That brings the total for 2016 to :87..not as spectacular as some years, but more than a book a week, so I guess I can't complain.
Stay tuned for my top 10 list...being calculated now!