
Freesias, blooming and smelling divine near the side entrance and driveway. Just because they're cheerful and in full bloom now.
It's 9 o'clock on Saturday, and I've been up for hours, and done stuff already.
Mr. Ken and friends headed up to Sears Point (properly known as Infineon Raceway) for drag racing - 3 races, Mr. Ken for support and a girlfriend of someone to cheer. We left for the meeting place at 5:45 -they were meeting at 6:15 - and I brought the little truck home with me because my plans for the day include buying soil amendments and plants at the garden store.
After the caravan left, it was breakfast time. Local coffee shop, lots of people, good omelet and tea.
Then home to wait.
It's been such a few weeks that I've not posted about all our appliances suddenly becoming 10 years old and thinking of giving out on us. First, the dryer with the stupid touch pad died. We have a second washer and dryer, so I exchanged them. Then the refrigerator starting making occasional clunking sounds at the end of its cooling cycle. Now it makes the noise every time the compressor shuts off. Finally, the microwave makes lots of noise and no heat. Bad news all around.
A couple of weeks ago I finally remembered to call for service, and an appointment was set for today, sometime between 8 and 5. I planned my day - lots of cleaning around the house, some gardening, maybe even a quick run to a non-quite local yarn store. Everything away from home depended on when the repairman showed up, and if he called ahead. Given the general tone of the last couple of weeks, I figured I'd not hear anything until 3:45 or so, and would be stuck at home all day. Oh well.
At 7:43 the repairman called. I was first on the list, and he'd be here by 8. Woohoo!
He was. The dryer would cost more to repair than a replacement, so nothing doing there - I'll continue to use the current one until I'm ready to upgrade the washer and dryer. The refrigerator has a loose spring in the compressor, same thing. It's probably not going to die anytime soon, so I can plan to replace it when I'm ready.
The microwave is repaired. We'd described its symptoms to a local appliance parts place and been assured that the magnatron tube was burned out. We though about replacing it ourselves, but it's built in and is also the vent for the cooktop, so it's not an easy task.
Turns out I'm glad we were lazy. It wasn't the magnatron tube, it was a diode which was much easier to replace. It was less than half the price of a new microwave, the repairman was done by 8:30, part of the garden got weeded and watered, and as soon as I change clothes I'm heading for the garden stores!