[RD] Life

dusters

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This thread is about real or supposed reanimation. Do you keep plants? Have you succefully recovered a rotting plant? How did it happen? What about animals? Have you rescued a cat or a dog? Maybe some other animal?

Yes, this thread is inspired by "Death" thread. Spring is coming in some parts of the world, so that fits as well.


How do we increase the healthiness and well-being of our home enviroment? This question is about situation in your flat or house. Please keep political discussion out of this thread.

I would like to keep this thread about wildlife, pets, plants etc.

Do you agree that wooden furniture makes your flat feel more vital? What about other eco materials? Do you do anything, like keeping fish, pets or something else to avoid the feeling of being boxed in in urban, plastic claustrophobic space?
 
Haven't had a kitten since 1989.

Had 5 cats since then.

Found one starving under a house we moved into. She got a home.

4 more adopted from animal shelter. We go there, friendliest kitteh or 2 gets a home.
 
My house is a rather unusual design, notably having a courtyard in the middle of it and a lot of windows including most of one entire wall in the living room facing a very rural, green (or white, currently) backyard.

Yes, wife and I rescued a cat, who has been with us somewhere north of a decade now. I suppose he does make us feel more vital in a way; being a cat he annoys us as often as not with his loud insistence on various routines.

And speaking of wildlife, my stepdaughter and three grandchildren are living with us. Jury is still out regarding whether they make us feel more boxed in or less...
 
My cat would murder any living plant I had, so I don't keep plants.

However, I have lots of my grandmother's paintings on the walls, and all of them have plenty of trees, water, and mountains.

Most of my furniture is wood, and much of it was made by my dad. One of the things he made that brings the outdoors indoors is a wood carving he made of a snowy owl - made from a tree stump he salvaged in the forest near Vernon, BC.

If I were allowed to repaint the walls, they'd be green. It's the most relaxing color for me (I once advised the owner of one of the local second-hand bookstores to go with green carpet and walls in her new store when she moved her shop two doors down... my rationale was that green is relaxing, people would spend more time browsing, and therefore would be more likely to find something they'd like to buy - she took that advice).

As for animals... I have a cat and am surrounded by three whales, a bunny rabbit, Garfield, a gopher, a puffin, some cats and dogs (pet rocks), and several dozen penguins. I guess the Starfleet teddy bear is still an animal... (and this is just the living room).
 
I like to keep plastic flowers in my room. They are just as friendly and companion like and yet require zero maintenance. I am contemplating getting a plastic cactus for my office just to see how long it takes people to catch on it really does not need watering.
 
I like to keep plastic flowers in my room. They are just as friendly and companion like and yet require zero maintenance. I am contemplating getting a plastic cactus for my office just to see how long it takes people to catch on it really does not need watering.

That is a fun one. Do you keep them for aesthetic reasons or is there something else as well?
 
This thread is about real or supposed reanimation. Do you keep plants? Have you succefully recovered a rotting plant? How did it happen? What about animals? Have you rescued a cat or a dog? Maybe some other animal?
I have a couple of plastic plants to give my home the faint illusion of greenery. Real flowers I'll take care of if I receive them but I never go out and purchase them on my own accord.

I'm not really a pet person.

Do you agree that wooden furniture makes your flat feel more vital? What about other eco materials? Do you do anything, like keeping fish, pets or something else to avoid the feeling of being boxed in in urban, plastic claustrophobic space?
I look at how each individual piece fits in with my design taste, whether it is wood or plastic. Take for example this dining room set from the early 1950s:

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I'd take something like this if I could get the full set. Since I do most of my living and dining furniture shopping at flea markets or antique stores, they're pretty rare to come across in a full set. There are lots of furniture stores here that kind of have a retro design in some of them, but the make looks kind of cheap compared to the real thing and something just comes "off" about it. It's very hard to explain on the internet, but I would be able to point it out if I were talking face-to-face. Most of my interior design aesthetics are taken from the old cafes I go to; the Japanese adaptation of Western furnishings to their country.

Here's a random example I pulled elsewhere from the internet:

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This would be my living/dining set if I could get my hands on it, carpet and all. Probably wouldn't need 30 chairs though, I'm not that sociable.
 
For myself - I plan to get most of stuff wooden and very minimalistic. I have one plant in my room now (14.5 m^2 room) and I have wooden desk and lockers.

Ty for the pictures amadeus. I plan to get some Japanese elements in my design eventually. Right now I have painted walls.
 
These are not my pictures but I've been to these cafes.

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The last picture here (hopefully it shows! The links look good from my end) was inside an old shopping center that closed late last year.

Fortunately or unfortunately depending on how you look at it, I was there on the last day before they closed; I had assumed they would close at the end of the month like the rest of the mall, but they were closing a few days earlier. All of these old cafes are being replaced by Starbucks and their domestic counterparts, and I just feel they lack the relaxed atmosphere and unrefined, unique homestyle food of the old kissaten. I'll be alright if they just keep two or three open in my lifetime so at least I'll have somewhere to go on my days off work.
 
Is it really in Osaka? What about smaller towns? Do they have livelier cafes?
 
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The fourth picture is from a cafe at Fuse, Higashi-Osaka, which is itself a separate city but just a few minutes train ride from either Tsuruhashi or Uehonmachi, two relatively close stations that combined handle about 500,000 tickets daily. Like a few other major Japanese cities, Osaka is served not by one rail company but the Osaka Metro, Japan Railways, and the Kintetsu, Nankai, Hankyu, Hanshin, and Keihan railway companies. If it sounds daunting, the railways generally operate in separate areas and overlap with other private railways tends to be low; Nankai (南海), for example operates from the center of the city south down to the cities of Wakayama and Hashimoto. Hankyu (阪急), on the other hand, operates from the north of the city up towards Kyoto and out to Kobe.

I can't speak to rural prefectures so much as I haven't really lived in that rural of an area but I've traveled out to many in Osaka Prefecture itself. There are still cafes operating out in those areas, and if I had to guess based on foot traffic per capita probably about the same as the city proper. One that I really liked was out in Izumisano, about a 30-35 minute train ride on the Nankai main line out towards Wakayama. They're scattered here and there so I don't find myself patronizing the same one over and over again so much, save for the ones closest to my apartment.
 
The fourth picture is from a cafe at Fuse, Higashi-Osaka, which is itself a separate city but just a few minutes train ride from either Tsuruhashi or Uehonmachi, two relatively close stations that combined handle about 500,000 tickets daily. Like a few other major Japanese cities, Osaka is served not by one rail company but the Osaka Metro, Japan Railways, and the Kintetsu, Nankai, Hankyu, Hanshin, and Keihan railway companies. If it sounds daunting, the railways generally operate in separate areas and overlap with other private railways tends to be low; Nankai (南海), for example operates from the center of the city south down to the cities of Wakayama and Hashimoto. Hankyu (阪急), on the other hand, operates from the north of the city up towards Kyoto and out to Kobe.

I can't speak to rural prefectures so much as I haven't really lived in that rural of an area but I've traveled out to many in Osaka Prefecture itself. There are still cafes operating out in those areas, and if I had to guess based on foot traffic per capita probably about the same as the city proper. One that I really liked was out in Izumisano, about a 30-35 minute train ride on the Nankai main line out towards Wakayama. They're scattered here and there so I don't find myself patronizing the same one over and over again so much, save for the ones closest to my apartment.

This sounds great. I will try to visit some next time I visit Japan.
 
We killed around a dozen houseplants in various attempts at patio gardening before getting some succulents that are too hardy to die. My wife often gets small succulents as gifts from parents and we have combined them all into one big planter. It's weird because a couple of the transplanted plants dropped their leaves and died, but then the leaves sprouted roots and new leaves and kept on going.

I've owned two dogs and they were both rescue mutts.

I don't have a ton of control over my furniture at the moment. Most of our durable (high quality) pieces were hand-me-downs and they're too expensive for us to replace at the moment. So the net effect is we have a mishmash of styles that are at best loosely coordinated. Most of our furniture is dark-grained wood though.
 
We like wood, stone and tile around us.

The house we built in NC was about 30% reused materials including:
  • 2x6 Wood ceilings from a old shoe factory in Maine
  • 6 panel doors from a hotel in Waterville ME
  • Post and beam construction from a barn
  • Brick work from a school in rural NC
  • Door hinges and hardware from various places
That was years ago though. More recently:
  • Extra Argentine mahogany shelving from my mother in laws house in CT was turned into cabinets in our living room
  • Wood from a very large mimosa tree (died a few years back) in our NM home was used to create a 100+ piece block set for our granddaughter. The tree was a centerpiece of our back yard and held swings and parachutes while our kids grew up.
  • Along with the mimosa tree, drought killed a huge 50 year old apricot tree in the backyard. Pieces of that tree along with some quebracho wood my wife's parents brought back from Argentina in 1952 have become a wonderful wooden "rag" doll.
  • When we filled in our swimming pool, we used some of the fencing around it as an arbor top. In warm weather I have my breakfast under it.
  • A pair of my step dad's cuff links became earrings for my wife
 
(Dennis Miller voice on)

The last time I heard about Argentinian wood was when Juan Peron caught wind some ex-SS officers were looking Buenos Aires real estate. (voice off)

I remember about 15 years ago old barnwood was fetching a premium price. I drove by quite a few old barns thinking that these people were sitting on a gold mine and sadly letting it rot.

I hope your home construction was before that!
 
I'm too lazy to have plants in the house, I'd neglect them.
My mum does the gardening, I cook what she produces. Given shes 80 this year I'm trying to persuade her a house with a smaller (or no) garden would be better.

All my bookcases are wood, they're the furniture I care about most.
My pictures are mostly maps or mythological creatures, my mothers are wildflowers mostly.
 
This thread is about real or supposed reanimation. Do you keep plants? Have you succefully recovered a rotting plant? How did it happen? What about animals? Have you rescued a cat or a dog? Maybe some other animal?
We have a small garden, and once the growing-season starts, I usually spend a couple of hours a week doing general maintenance on it: watering, mowing, raking, pruning, etc. This summer I'll be having fun finally chopping down and digging out a Robinia that died a couple of years back — possibly as a result of my over-pruning it (but that was OK, because the neighbours had started to complain about it shading their garden — hence the over-pruning!).

We keep potted plants on the terrace, windowsills, and outside the front door, and occasional (usually gifted) houseplants indoors, but tending to those is usually my wife's preserve (routine daily maintenance is not my strong suit: if it was left to me, they'd likely dry out pretty quickly!).

When I was a kid/teen, we had 2 cats and later also a dog (my mum's idea, even though we both pointed out beforehand that she didn't have time to look after it*). None of them were technically rescued animals, but they did all come from litters of pets owned by my mum's friends/acquaintances.
Spoiler * :
After my sister and I had both gone away to college, our dog would get left in the utility-room on her own, often for 8-10 hours a day — which really p****d me off, because it was so unfair. Even once I was back home, nothing much changed for her because I (also) began working 10- to 15-hour days, 6 days a week (near-minimum wage job, so this was the only way to make anything even close to a useful salary).
Now that I've settled down, I'd love to have a cat (or 2!) again, but unfortunately my wife is allergic to cat-fur (I'm also quite keen on seeing birds round the garden, so that's another strike against the idea). And since we both work away from home, 6-9 hours a day, 3+5 days a week, a dog's not a hugely practical option either; they're pack-animals at heart, so we'd really only be able to take good care of one if it came to work with us. That said, my wife's employer certainly declares itself to be dog-friendly. (I have no idea if mine has made any ruling either way, though in 13 years here, I've only met 2 dogs: one of those belongs to the current owner's wife, who's not an employee — and the other I've only seen once, a week or two back, when our punk-rocking IT guy brought his in, because his wife was away from home that day).

When they were younger, our boys occasionally asked about having rabbits/guinea pigs, but neither of us were keen on that idea (we suggested mice/gerbils instead, but they weren't interested in that), and they haven't asked recently.
Do you agree that wooden furniture makes your flat feel more vital? What about other eco materials?
Yes, definitely agree on that. I've always preferred solid wood furniture, even if only something soft/cheap like pine. And when we're buying MDF-based flatpack furniture/ shelving to save money, I'd also prefer a natural(-looking) woodgrain(-style) laminate rather than a single-colour obviously-plastic laminate.
Do you do anything, like keeping fish, pets or something else to avoid the feeling of being boxed in in urban, plastic claustrophobic space?
Aside from the costs, there are lots of potential/ actual eco-ethical problems with buying/ keeping tropical (marine) fish. Might be an interesting exercise to try constructing a (semi-)closed aquarium-ecosystem of local/native species, and/or sink a pond, but our current property doesn't really offer the space for either of those.

I don't really feel boxed-in by urban sprawl, though. We live right on the edge of a small town, with fields and a (semi-natural) pond <100 m down the road, small patches of woodland only a little further away than that, larger patches within easy biking-distance, and the nearest edge of the Lueneburger Heide only ~10 km away.

My wife would really like for us to live by the sea, though. Maybe after we retire...
 
(Dennis Miller voice on)

The last time I heard about Argentinian wood was when Juan Peron caught wind some ex-SS officers were looking Buenos Aires real estate. (voice off)

I remember about 15 years ago old barnwood was fetching a premium price. I drove by quite a few old barns thinking that these people were sitting on a gold mine and sadly letting it rot.
I hope your home construction was before that!
We built that house in the mid 70s. We only used the timbers from the barn. 8"x10" and larger to build the post and beam frame for the house. We got the wood for free by taking the barn down.
 
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