Weather and walkability
The photo is from last Thursday when it was still icy cold. Since then we had a rise in temperature, snowfall and wind and thaw and rain… I stayed in for three days; until this afternoon, when it seemed streets and walkways looked fairly walkable again (with most of the snow gone). Actually they were mostly walkable again – except here and there.
There’s a lot of “here and there” stuff going on in winter because each property owner is responsible for the pavement outside their own house or yard. And not everyone takes the responsibility equally serious.
Anyway I managed to get myself to a mailbox and a nearby store and back home again without accidents.
Dilemma solved
Maybe someone is curious how I ended up treating the dilemma presented in a previous post? After giving the matter a lot more thought than it was worth, I sent a printed Christmas postcard with no room for extra messages. (Why can’t I just make that kind of decisions straight away? It would make life so much simpler…)
A frustratingly slow Sunday
Yesterday was a very frustrating day because I had constant trouble with my computer or broadband or one or more internet servers, and I wasn’t able to pinpoint where the fault might be – until in the evening, when the broadband gave up completely. Then I decided that had probably been responsible for all the trouble the whole day (even though at times it seemed to be working) and went to bed with my Kindle and The Lewis Man (the book!)
Again, it would have been wiser of me to give up the internet much earlier in the day and just do something else with my time instead of keep trying to check every five minutes if perhaps...
This morning I slept late and after breakfast found myself in touch with the world again at normal speed.
New worries. Or not.
So it was not until the mail dropped in late in the afternoon that I needed to start worrying again…
(Bear with me, or stop reading here.)
No, nothing to do with Christmas cards this time.
The cause of worry was a letter from the landlord (=The City), giving a very complicated explanation (if it can be called that) of the expected procedure when next year they are going to install a new optic fibre cable in the building, to give us new options for broadband and TV and phones. This will probably be good once it’s all fixed; but my first reaction after reading the letter was PANIC, as it seemed that I may have to move lots of heavy furniture, like bookcases full of books. Which first of all I can’t do, and second of all, there’d be nowhere to put it all without it still being in the way.
Taking deep breaths, reading the letter again… It just makes no sense. Installing a new box in the hall, yes, that bit I understand. And it’s doable. But if they’re going to draw the cables from that box in the hall… Why on earth would they want to draw it (as they say their intention is) to the same place where my old cable socket is? – which means all around the living room, to a spot by the window, which is not a place where most people would want to have their TV anyway. (Well – at least I don’t, which is why I have extension cables from there and half way round the room to a place much closer to the hall…)
Next the letter says they’re also going to put an extra socket in the room next to the living room - which means the one I use as study. They don’t specify which wall in that room, but again it does not seem to make any sense to draw the cable across the room.
What would make sense, to me, would be to put both the new cable sockets next to the door between the livingroom and the study (which is quite close the hall, and also the same wall where I have the TV). That would involve a minimum of cable-drawing – and, as it happens, in my flat no need to move any furniture.
So… I think I shall try to put off worrying until I find out what it is they really mean to do…??
7 comments:
Oh gosh, I am sure this will worry you till you actually find out more or talk to someone about maybe if you have options. BUT the good part is this, fiber optic is ten times faster than anything!
Even though you are "only" the tenant and not the owner of the flat, you should have a say in the matter, shouldn't you? Hopefully, the people responsible for this will be open to reasonable arguments.
Over here, people are responsible for "their" bit of the pavement, too. Some go about it with much enthusiasm, scraping it free of each tiny snow flake who dares to fall, while others couldn't care less. And it is the scraped-free bits that are the most dangerous - they get all slippery when it warms up a bit and then freezes over again, while where the snow is just left alone, it gets compact and gives grip to the soles of boots and shoes of those who walk on it.
Don't sweat the small stuff Monica. And it's almost all small stuff when you think about it....or don't as the case may be. It'll all be all right on the night.
Meike, formally I don't think we really have any say in the matter, as they probably want the standard in each flat to be the same. However, there is a small hope that the letter might be more complicated than actual reality.
Yeah, I keep telling myself that, Graham. Heavy furniture per definition ain't small stuff, though!
i did continue to read and am just as confused as you are... glad you got your internet back and i do the same thing, i went without for 3 days and i must have checked 90 times a day..
My broadband went out again this afternoon. It left no message when it's coming back. (Writing this on my phone.) The advent calendar is prescheduled so should turn up as usual.
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