Archive for the ‘Weather’ Category

Zach says Hi

Saturday, June 24th, 2006

A little movie where Zach waves hi to his fans. He is playing with Grandma and showing off to the camera. Grandma joined us for the weekend since Steph had class and Paul is oncall. So we needed to make sure Zach had some company.

This last week saw some very high temperatures in the Bay Area. Now we are (finally) heating up in Seattle. Today the temp should be around 80 and getting closer to 90 on Sunday and Monday. Not too shabby after the cloudy weather we’ve had. Actually, the days have been pretty clear up here over the last week. While the temps are on the coolish side (high 60s/low 70s)…we don’t get the wind like in the Bay Area – and that I do NOT miss.

Rain…In Seattle?

Friday, May 26th, 2006

No one told us it rains in Seattle. :-) Just Kidding. Well, we’ve been here for a day and a half and there is no sun. Cloudy and rain in the afternoons. Looks like it will be this way until Sunday…then we should see the evasive sun.

So far things have gone well (except for our buyers who are being difficult – more about that later). The trip up was smooth but very stressful. It took us 45 minutes just to check in our stuff (7 bags and 3 pets). The TSAs at the airport had me take each pet out of their crates one by one – no big deal except Oscar had already pee’d all over himself. So dad smelled like cat urine for the flight up…pleasant. I was able to cram all of our stuff into the mini-van with little room to spare.

Steph and I are going to start looking at homes with our realtor today and tomorrow. We’ll be checking out the I90 corridor today and then Shoreline/Edmonds/Lynnwood tomorrow. Steph and I will check out West Seattle on our own on Sunday.

Back to our home buyers. One thing to note, they are first time home buyers. Our house, like so many in the village have sloping issues. The heavy fireplaces caused these homes to settle lower on that side of the house. Sure, you can fix it, but no one has since it’s not worth it. Plus it doesn’t cause any immediate structural concerns. The buyers also want a larger living room so they want to knock out a wall (not our problem). They had a structural engineer investigate the foundation and the wall – this first engineer was not concerned with the sloping but suggested $8-10k of other foundation work (replacing some concrete footings).

Next came the home inspection…I’ve been part of about 5 home inspections and they typically take 60 to 90 minutes. Their guy took 3 1/2 hours. In 3 1/2 hours you will find tons of problems with any house. This guy makes the buyers fearful of the sloping issue…also, this home inspector was not familiar with homes in the village (based on a conversation I had with him).

Now the buyers want to bring in a second structural engineer…of course, he gives them a totally different opinion. He’s claims the house needs the sloping fixed at a cost of $25k. Crap…these guys will tell you anything you want to hear.

So what do I care? We just put the home back on the market and be done with it. Not so simple. Now that the buyers have gotten these multiple varying opinions – we are obligated to disclose all of this in the future. Any new home buyer will look at this as a mega foundation project – it will most likely scare anyone away. The sad thing is we could have asked for $820k for the home but we chose to ask for $805k since we wanted to sell it quickly and we understand that no home is perfect.

When we moved in we had a structural engineer investigate the foundation for us. He concluded that some work could be done, but wasn’t necessary. He was only concerned with the sloping assuming this was the only house that sloped, otherwise, no big deal.

Now we are in a waiting game.

Bay Area Snow

Saturday, March 11th, 2006

This latest set of storms has brought some unusual cold weather. Storms generally don’t bring cold air with it, but last night we had snow at unusual spots throughout the area. San Francisco streets were whitened as were streets in Berkeley. Even 280 was closed between 92 and Edgewood Road. Unfortunately, we did have a serious 31 car pileup in Marin County because of the unexpected snow and ice.

Yesterday afternoon I took a quick drive along Skyline from 92 to Saratoga Summit. There was only snow, about an inch, at Saratoga Summit. This morning I took the same drive but was greeted to a winter wonderland on Kings Mountain. It’s a beautiful site to see Redwood trees with snow on them. I posted pictures at paulandsteph.com. Below are some of my favorites.

Skyline Ridge Open Space Preserve.

Skyline on Kings Mountain.

Quiet mountain setting.

Stormy weather

Monday, February 27th, 2006

Well, we have a decent storm pulling into the area right now….We’ve had .89″ of rain so far today and we are seeing rain rates of 1/4″ to 1/3″ per hour. Winds are also slowly picking up with gusts close to 30MPH. Unfortunately it’s a very warm storm with the current temperature at 61 degrees F. Not good for the snow in our local mountains.

Visiting Traverse City

Monday, February 20th, 2006

Zach took his first plane trip on Saturday. We flew from San Francisco to Chicago, had a lengthy layover in Chicago and then caught a quick flight from Chicago to Traverse City. Upon arrival we were greeted with a brisk 1 degree Fahrenheit. Refreshing! So why the trip to Traverse City in the middle of Winter? So Zach could meet his great grandparents on Steph’s side. We didn’t arrive until late Saturday night, therefore, we didn’t get over to grandma’s until Sunday morning.

Zach sleeping in Grandma’s arms.

Zach, Steph, and great grandma and great grandpa.

Lin’s childhood home.
You can see all of the photos at paulandsteph.com.
There was plenty of snow on the ground – upwards of two feet. Most of which fell in the last week. We didn’t have any real snow fall while we were here but we definitely got a feel for the cold air. It was cold by Traverse City standards. Here is the view on Sunday morning from our hotel patio.

I walked out there the first night we arrived and sank up to my thigh in a fairly deep snow drift! I thought I was hiking up a little mound built up by the ground…not true.
We had a wonderful time and now it’s back to California. Next I need to figure out what is causing the spot on the up right of my photos – it happens with multiple lens so I assume I have something on the sensor.

Idiotic News Reporters

Monday, August 29th, 2005

I’m all for going to a hurricane and reporting on it…but I wouldn’t stand under power lines! Or next to a building with roofing flying off! These are just a few of the stupid things I saw reporters do during their Hurricane coverage.

The Weather Channel seemed to have the most veteran crew – you didn’t see Jim Cantore standing outside dodging flying debris that could kill him. CNN was a step down from TWC as far as weather smarts. They were outside but not in the worst parts. They evacuated well inland to provide continuous live coverage, but they were still in harms way Monday morning.

Fox News definitely gets the Darwin Awards for standing in the face of danger. They seemed to want their reporters to be in the most severe spot as long as possible. They had one guy on the MS coast with the eye about 80 to 100 miles to his south. He was commenting on how the storm wasn’t that strong…duh! I assume he got out to safer ground although they continually talked about seeking shelter in this motel near them next to the beach. Basically, it was 3 to 5 hours from landfall and the Fox team was still looking for shelter. Morons!

Plus, Fox News was very disappointed when Katrina was downgraded from Category 5 to Category 4…they showed visible disappointment in what could have otherwise been a great story. Sad :-( They rather have maximum destruction vs saving lives and property…they make more money that way.

Well, just another reason to not watch Fox News. It’s clear that Fox News wants the most dangerous, ludicrous, self serving view into an incident…no matter what the cost to others or they’re own.

Hurricane Katrina!

Sunday, August 28th, 2005

WOW! This thing is enormous and very, very dangerous. The Weather Channel latest report has winds @ 184MPH and pressure at 902mb.

This could cause a storm surge of up to 28ft! This definitely has the potential to be a catastrophic storm and I hope everyone evacuates – this is not a storm to ride out.

Aug.29.2005 Obviously the hurricane is gone – hence the changing satellite picture. Here is the NWS data on Katrina