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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I live in Austin, Texas, with my partner, Ray, and our child dog, Mocha. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘furniture’



2009 in Review

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

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January (N-Seoul Tower, Seoul, Korea)
Family visit to Korea.  No casualties.

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February (St. David’s Hospital, Austin, Texas)
Welcoming Madison Maguregui into the world.

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March (Home, Round Rock, Texas)
Ray and Mocha.

Living room

April (Home, Round Rock, Texas)
New floors!  Followed soon by new furniture.

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May (Home, Round Rock, Texas)
Baby bird nesting in the hanging flowerpot on the back porch.

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June (Home, Round Rock, Texas)
7 months after their dog of 17 years passed, my parents acquired a puppy.  They named her “Brandy”, but everyone calls her “Boo” because she startles really easily.

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July (The Bazaar, Şanlıurfa, Turkey)
Voyeuristic snap of these boys waiting for … something.

Not Bhutan, El Paso.

August (Campus of the University of Texas, El Paso)
UTEP at sunset.

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September #1 (The Driskill Hotel, Austin, Texas)
Wonderful dinner for our 9th anniversary.

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September #2 (Castillo San Felipe del Morro, San Juan, Puerto Rico)
I had a free day, all right?  Don’t question me.

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October (Home, Round Rock, TX)
… no comment.

Old Granary Burial Ground

November (Old Granary Burial Ground, Boston, Massachusetts)
Paul Revere is buried here.

Water Tower

December (Downtown, Round Rock, Texas)
Bokeh Madness.

What we have here is a failure to communicate

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

We had new chairs delivered for the reading room today. They’re nice, big, comfortable overstuffed chairs and, unlike the ones that were considered old when I first arrived here in 1998, you don’t feel as though you’re in danger of falling through the bottom of them when you sit in them.

We ordered them some time ago, but naturally they took a while because you can’t get industrial strength furniture off the shelf at IKEA–you have to order it from the Industrial Strength Furniture Store. And this morning, Lisa walks into my office with the delivery guy in tow.

“OK,” she says, “We have a little problem.”
“OK,” I say.
“Well, the delivery charge only includes getting the chairs as far as the loading dock.”
“Yeah, I knew that,” I said.
“Well, how are we going to get them up here?”
“I guess maybe Chris and I could carry them up?” [there's a new guy in the office, and he's also a Chris. Go fig.]
“Um, no,” she said. “You know he’ll be upset if he breaks a nail or something.”
“So …. ” I said, wondering what our options were.
“Well, he says that he can bring them up himself –”
“Great!”
“–for a second delivery fee of… What did you say? $60?”
The delivery guy says, “Yeah, it’s like, $62.50. I can call it in.”
I look at Lisa, “We paid on a purchase order, though. I mean, we can’t pay him in cash or a check.”
“We can amend the purchase order,” she says.
“We can?”
“Yeah.”
“Then do it. I mean, we spent $1,300 on the chairs, what’s another $60?”

And so the delivery guy goes down and brings up the three large boxes with the new chairs in them, and then stands there looking like he’s waiting for something.

“So, um,” she says, “Can you give me an invoice for the delivery fee?”
“I thought you were going to write me a check,” he says.
Lisa and I look blankly at him, then at each other, then back at him.
“No,” she says, “We talked about the purchase order, remember?”
“Yeah, but … I mean, I can’t walk out of here on a purchase order.”
(Long pause)
Lisa says, “You were standing right there when we talked about amending the purchase order to include the delivery fee.”
“Yeah, but I thought you could issue a check right away for it.”
“Have you ever dealt with the University of Texas before? You’ll be lucky if you have a check a month from now.”
He crosses his arms, “Well, I can’t leave without the delivery fee.”

Fortunately, they take credit cards. Fortunately, the card didn’t get rejected at the vendor because I’m not sure we can actually use a state credit card for a delivery fee, but the charge went through and he left. Afterwards, Lisa and I just looked at each other and laughed. What else could we do?

Like a Retro Cowboy

Monday, October 16th, 2006

So I’m back from my big weekend up in Fort Worth. I’ve been up there since Thursday afternoon at a conference, which went extremely well for us, but bears no more discussion than that. We do this one every year, and this was probably more successful than in previous years (as has been the general trend) and the only real thing to say about it is that the dread I felt on setting out on Thursday turned out to be unfounded. Sometimes these things can be painful, other times they turn out less so. This was one of those other times.

My main surprise and pleasure came from being in Fort Worth. I’ve never really spent a lot of time in Fort Worth, except for an overnight trip where a co-worked insisted that we had to stay at the Stockyards Hotel, one of those national historic hotel places that features cowhide furniture and boot jacks in each room and is soooo not for the vegetarians at heart.

Fort Worth tends to get lumped in with Dallas (they’ve even hyphenated themselves together: Dallas-Fort Worth), and is usually treated like Dallas’ semi-retarded stepsister who is along for the ride only because bringing her along was a condition for getting the keys to the car.

Fort Worth has come into its own, however, and Fort Worthers are very proud to tell you all of the reasons why they’re better than their more brash neighbor to the east.

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Fort Worth has its origins in the cattle trade, once having been the end point of the famed Chisholm Trail that brought the cows down from Kansas. If you go to the Stockyards, they still run the cattle around the block every day so that all the tourists can take a break from wearing blisters on their ankles (new cowboy boots) and move the stetson hats out of their faces and take pictures of the moo-cows as they run through the middle of the city.

On the other hand, there’s something chic about the new Fort Worth – you can always tell a local from a tourist by the way they wear their boots and hats.

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The new heart of downtown Fort Worth is Sundance Square, where they have lots of western kitsch shops and a couple of local institutions. There is actually a place called Retro Cowboy, but it sells the same sort of crap that every honky tonk Texas themed store at the D/FW airport sells, so I moseyed out as quickly as I moseyed in. Leddy’s Ranch sells real stuff, real cowboy shirts (starting at $110), real stetsons (don’t ask), and real boots, along with a real, honest-to-god cowhide boot shine stand. I moseyed out of there pretty quickly, mainly because I was afraid that I might touch something and be required to purchase it as a result.

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Sundance Square

Fort Worth also has another claim to fame, personified by the hotel where we stayed. We stayed at the Hilton Fort Worth, which used to be the Radisson Plaza, which used to be the Hotel Texas. The Hotel Texas is where JFK and Jackie stayed on November 21, 1963, i.e., the night before he was assassinated in downtown Dallas (other point of interest: they flew from Fort Worth to Dallas, a trip of about 45 miles). There’s a little too much “last day of his life” memorabilia in the hotel, including a reproduction of a hand sketching of the hotel with explanatory caption hanging right in every bathroom for you to ruminate upon while you take care of other business. It’s a little morbid, that’s all I’m saying.

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The New Voice of Fort Worth

I shot a good number of these photos on Saturday afternoon after our second session at the conference. The other point to bringing up the changing ownership of the Fort Worth Hilton is that apparently when the group signed the paperwork with the hotel to host their conference, it was still the Radisson, and when Hilton took over, they remodeled and shrank the number of conference breakout rooms. Hence, our Friday session had 80 people squeezed into a room designed for 50. On Saturday, we had a good 35, in a room in another building — but on the 26th floor, featuring spectacular why-didn’t-I-bring-my-camera views of downtown Fort Worth, including the Tarrant County Courthouse:

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But the real highlight, as we discovered, is the food that you can find in the new Fort Worth… I made my happy food face (as Natalie calls it) quite a bit over the weekend.

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Let’s begin with Reata, which you’re looking at in the above photo.

Reata was founded in Alpine, Texas, which is the next town over from Marfa, a place that has been in the news a lot lately as the new hip artist colony in the middle of nowhere (see: Taos, etc.)

Reata advertises itself as new southwest cuisine. Anything that advertises as “new” generally piques my interest, because even if they serve the same old stuff (enchiladas) that you’re used to in southwestern cuisine, they tend to present it in new and interesting ways with new and interesting incredients (barbecued shrimp smoked so fine that they neither tasted nor had the texture of shrimp). The three of us greatly enjoyed our time at Reata (the cute, if obviously straight, waiter was a bonus), from the beverage selection to Allegra’s carne asada and Natalie’s chiles rellenos with roasted corn bisque. The dark chocolate bread pudding-stuffed tamale for desert (with a side of dulce de leche ice cream) was also just a bonus, but it’s nice to be on per diem sometimes, as I think we each spent our entire day’s alottment on one single meal.

On Friday night, Natalie’s friend Leann, who is a die-hard Fort Worther, took us to what she swears is the best restaurant in town: Piranha Killer Sushi.

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Let me begin by saying that I do not, as a rule, care for sushi that much. I’ve had sushi before, and it’s OK. I neither like it nor dislike it, it’s just there. If more sushi tasted like this stuff, I would have a radically different opinion. I had sushi that didn’t taste like fish. Let’s start off with the most unbelievable thing: the so-called “merry-me roll” (shrimp tempura, ginger cream, avocado, topped with avacado, tuna & strawberries). Yes, you read that right. Strawberries. Or the Dr. Fran Roll (shrimp tempura, eel, cream cheese, masago, scallions, topped with tuna & avocado). Was I squeamish about eating the sashimi tuna? Yes. But the wasabi cream made it spicy, and the texture was simply unreal.

This is not your grandfather-san’s sushi place, and if you have the chance to go to Fort Worth and are even remotely interested in sushi, make reservations before you go (we waited 2 hours for a table, which Leann simply. does. not. do.)

Before heading back on Sunday, Natalie and I ventured over to the Kimbell Museum, one of the impressive new installments that make up Fort Worth’s cultural district. They had an exhibition on Hatshepsut (she who became King, there being no word in the ancient Egyptian language for “queen”), and it was very well put together. Certainly more interesting in composition than the exhibitions in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, if for no other reason than they didn’t have every piece that they own on display.

And so, today (Monday), I’m doing loads of exciting things around the house like laundry, and recovering from two weekends in a row working.

Tomorrow, I’ll have my smartass back on (Madonna and the Malawian baby, anyone?) and resume my regularly scheduled sneering.

 

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