Life's a Stitch

And more recently life’s a creative adventure with some travel thrown in.

Do you know your home's walk score? This number weighed heavily in our search for a place to live. Plug in your address on the Walkscore website. The higher the score, the more walkable your neighbourhood. Our previous house had a score of 25 out of 100. This one is a 92, can't do much better than that, and the bonus is that our street is quite quiet for being located in town. Our vehicle's gas bills have been reduced by 75%, partly due to the walkability, the rest is because living on the border we can duck down to the US for more reasonable fuel prices.

Made our first trek to the library, not a trek at all as it's two blocks down our street. I always feel a move is official upon the granting of a new library card. We've spent lots of time there on the free wifi as we aren't hooking up to to cable until after our construction phase is complete. Bonus: there's even a weekly knitting group. Here's my project, the New Wave Throw, one I started maybe two years ago:

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I haven't lived in a house with a full flight of stairs between the main living and bedroom level since my childhood. In our previous home you could go from the master bedroom to the kitchen, dining or living room in six to ten steps. In this house, which seems quite tunnular, my word for a ling, skinny house similar to a double shotgun house of the southern US, it's 6o steps from the kitchen to the bedroom, with a full flight of stairs in the middle. Maybe I should have walk scored the inside of the house. A gold plated problem for sure, I'm not complaining. We'll eventually have a second master bedroom on the ground floor in case we need it in the future. A former coworker of mine, also recently retired, has moved into a three story house, figuring she'll probably lose her memory before the ability to climb stairs. 

An appointment downtown Vancouver was my first foray into the peninsula's public transit. You board a cushy coach, as opposed to a city bus, for the 4o minute ride to Vancouver's Canada Line, followed by a 20 minute train ride, which puts you within a block of Vancouver City Hall. In traffic it would have taken the same amount of time plus the pricey parking.

The only down side, in this year of La Nina, is that sunny "White Rock" seems to have as many rainy days as the rain forest we left. But, as a friend pointed out, it's raining harder in Vancouver. According to statistics we can expect to have at least 25 percent more sun than YVR. C is looking forward to heading south, though, to find some sun to fully recover from his bout with pneumonia. 

 

 

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4 responses to “”

  1. LoriAngela Avatar
    LoriAngela

    Glad to see you are home and settled. I have been given a new library card twice because our library moved and then updated but it’s the same one since I was 7.

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  2. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    What a treat to have the library so close….and to have found a knitting group, already. The wave patterned throw is beautiful. Nice to be getting a little acquainted with your new neighborhood. Hmmmm…..stairs……will take some getting used to, I’m sure. It’s 24 degrees F here right now at noon, but with 20 mph wind, it feels like 7. Brrrr. However, we did have a fair November, which will shorten the long winter. I hope.

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  3. Kristen Avatar

    I’m jealous of my daughter and her husband who live in a little town and can walk to everything.
    Looking back with wisdom, we should have bought a one story house. Not that there are problems yet, but it seems inevitable.
    Hooray for beautiful knitting content!

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  4. Fran Avatar
    Fran

    Two things close to my heart: libraries and knitting! How wonderful for you to find them together! I’m a librarian and have often wondered if I could secretly knit behind the Reference Desk while at work! I would love to have a copy of your Herringbone Rib scarf. Thanks!

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