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Heidi's Journal

heidi
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11/05/2010 00:49 #53060

Vet for China?
Category: pets
When I moved into my apartment, it had fleas. I immediately treated China Cat and they all died. However, she's super allergic to the bites and has itched so much that she's got scabs and bald spots two months later. Ew! I know, TMI. Sorry. I think I have a lead on an elizabethan collar for her, so that plus some neosporin might fix it. If not tho, I'm gonna take her to the vet. Anyone have recommendations for a gentle, reasonably priced veterinarian?

Thanks!

In other news, I'm working too much (regular work + this crazy research assistant position I took on for almost no money), have too many school responsibilities, an ethics exam Saturday, but my laundry's done... except for the two sets of sheets, blanket, and quilt that China's puked on this week. *sigh*

Ten things I like about my new apartment
1. I can have a kitchen table AND a couch!
2. Full-size freezers fit frozen pizzas.
3. Temperature control means not being so energy wasteful and preventing heatstroke by having windows open during sub-freezing temperatures. The furnace had a gas leak, but the property management took care of it. They also replaced the hot water heater promptly when it sprung a leak. The water was just warm before but now it gets HOT!
4. I have a full-size tub! Actually, the whole bathroom is full-sized. The bathroom is really cute and I got adorable towels with whales on them.
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5. I have two walk-in closets.
6. It's quiet. I knew it would be quiet, but it's quieter than my bedroom at Uncle Dudley's in Pa. There you can hear the highway noise. It took me a bit to get used to.
7. I have a lovely east-facing double window in my kitchen that allows all the prisms to make beautiful rainbows.
8. The downstairs neighbors are Peter & Heidi.
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9. My living room is big enough that my bike lives in it as well as the couch.
10. Nisha can come visit again!

tinypliny - 11/06/10 14:23
Nice bathroom. :-)
heidi - 11/06/10 12:37
(e:matthew) - I've heard that the Summer Street place is super expensive.
(e:lauren) - I'll check them out. China hates to leave home, so that seems a little far, but your good words count a lot!
metalpeter - 11/06/10 12:21
  1. 4 the full size tub and bathroom for a girl/lady what ever term you want to use is very important
  1. 2 being able to have frozen Pizza space is also very important as well
lauren - 11/05/10 19:31
I am not really sure if our vet is pricey or not, but they have a really nice facility and usually we see one or two of the same doctors every time, and I am sure they would do their best to give you an estimate price when you call. They have also always been very nice and accommodating when we had emergencies with our cat. It's a bit of a trek, but I like it up there.

www.sheridananimalhospital.vetsuite.com
matthew - 11/05/10 11:56
I don't have much experience with vets, but have you tried the Summer Street Cat Clinic?

10/19/2010 22:40 #52983

Zoar Valley at risk
Category: politics
Y'all teased me about how boring my natural gas posts/rants were so I stopped writing about it... but I think you might want to monitor this story and submit comments to DEC.



...the Department of Environmental Conservation has proposed a “Strategic Forest Management Plan” for Zoar Valley and the rest of the 770,000 acres of New York State Forests. These forests are patches of wild land scattered across the state, set aside for their unique natural wonders or for simple reforestation.

This plan was sprung upon us with a bare two months until the Oct. 29 deadline on comments. The plan would industrialize these wild preserves with deep-well gas extraction using hydrofracking and horizontal drilling.

Its 5-acre wellheads, massive truck traffic, maze of roads, insatiable demand for fresh water and inevitable pollution of surface waters with salt, heavy metals and radon has no place in our state, let alone in such vulnerable and revered places as Zoar Valley.

The DEC’s plan proposes not only “fracking” in the forests but using forest resources to support fracking elsewhere. The plan would inject the witch’s brew of waste water from other sites into exhausted state forest gas wells and hope that it would not migrate into our drinking water. It would “steal” fresh water from these forests and turn it into polluted fracking waste.



Also see

The Zoar Valley is one of the most spectacular wilderness areas of Western New York. I have hiked and snowshoed the rim trails of the gigantic gorge, looking down from the cliffs at Cattaraugus Creek, 400 feet below. I've navigated a canoe through the current and rapids on one-way trips from west of Springville to Gowanda. So much to do there, and so much to see - spring wildflowers, waterfalls cascading down the cliffs, virgin and secondary-growth forests, herons, hawks and even an occasional bald eagle - this is a sacred place that must be protected.

Recently, I was shocked to learn of a proposal by the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) to allow gas drilling in the Zoar Valley State Forest using hydrofracking and horizontal drilling. The controversial fracking process contaminates millions of gallons of fresh water per gas well with toxic chemicals to help release the shale gas, permanently buries most of the water deep underground and has been blamed for contamination of drinking water and human illnesses. We can not let this happen in our beautiful Zoar Valley. Keep in mind too that the Cattaraugus Creek drains into Lake Erie, the source of drinking water in the Buffalo area.

The DEC writes that public comment is encouraged and will be accepted through 4:45 p.m., Friday, October 29, 2010. Please read the articles below, review the information on the DEC website, and submit comments to the DEC by email to State Forest Strategic Plan ( stateforestplan@gw.dec.state.ny.us ). Comments may also be mailed in a letter to Strategic Plan for State Forest Management, NYS DEC, 625 Broadway, Albany, NY 12233-4255.


heidi - 12/31/10 15:33
The state's final Strategic Plan & Generic Environmental Impact Statement for the state forests was released on the 29th. It's available here: :::link::: I haven't read it yet but wanted to let everyone know that it's available. They received over 3,000 comments.
heidi - 10/24/10 23:18
that link doesn't want to stick together to turn into :::link::: is there a way to fake it out?

Go here: :::link::: then click on "Take Action" and then on (1)

Thanks!
heidi - 10/24/10 23:16
(e:terry) - lovely comment, thank you!
(e:tinypliny) - the way to oppose it is through the comment process. Please copy & paste (e:terry)'s comment or create your own and email to stateforestplan AT gw.dec.state.ny.us
(e:paul) - what can you do? comment!
(e:theecarey) - the composition of the hydraulic fracturing fluid is just one small component. Think five acre well pads - one truckload of gravel at a time. Think 600 water tanker trips to provide the water that the chemicals get added to for 1 frac job. Think noise, light, and air pollution. Think of the risk to Cattaragus Creek. Think of the pipelines crossing prime forest land, disrupting wildlife habitat. The whole process sets up little factories all over the countryside, the industrialization of our green spaces.

Need help writing a comment? Go here for another sample and more details: :::link:::('PID','11')#State%20Forests

theecarey - 10/20/10 01:00
Nine information sessions/public hearings have been offered across the state since early September. Not sure if the following link has been included in this or prior posts. I haven't read it yet, but here is a draft of the proposed plan: :::link:::

As mentioned, comments and so on are encouraged.

I'm curious what sort of frac'ing process will be used... such as utilizing non-toxic additives as opposed to toxic ones to fracture formations and limit wastes, etc. Before I say more, I need to reading the proposal..
terry - 10/20/10 00:56
I sent a comment to the DEC:

"I am shocked and appalled that gas drilling and hydrofracking is even being considered in a protected wilderness area like Zoar Valley. This wonderful area is in constant use by those seeking to enjoy nature and the outdoors. To further pollute this environment, which is only now beginning to be remediated from the West Valley Project upstream, would be pure folly. While I understand that the merits and detriments of fracking are still widely contested, it is imperative that we retain our wilderness while we can, and do not allow the invasive intrusions that this is sure to bring. The potential water pollution of the creek and surrounding watershed is only one factor. The required infrastructure and associated transportation of heavy machinery and facilites cannot be allowed to impact this area.

Please note my protest to this plan, and know that I am not alone in my grievance. The fact that I, as someone who regularly frequents this area, was only made aware of this threat today, less than two weeks before the comment period is sent to end, should lend some weight to that fact."

I would encourage any of you reading who enjoy Zoar to also send a comment: stateforestplan@gw.dec.state.ny.us
feel free to copy/paste :)
tinypliny - 10/20/10 00:52
People here sue for the most minor of reasons. This has to constitute as a BIG reason, no? Can you get your law school mates together and sue the DEC?

On a tangent, why can't the DEC invest in a offshore wind turbine project in Erie instead? I am sure the wind velocities in the WNY region can generate plenty of energy. I read that the 8 windmills on our shore generate nearly 5-8% of the area's energy needs. That's really impressive and speaks volumes about the untapped wind-resource in Buffalo.
tinypliny - 10/20/10 00:26
Can't people oppose this? How can this happen without people having a say in this? This can't be democratic, can it? Can someone bring a public litigation against this and stall this until the DEC can be shaken up and made to see sense. If it doesn't see then, just bombard all your elected scummy politicians and remind them that they are working for you not for their own money making palinistic greed (yes, that evil oil-drilling anti-alternative-energy sarah palin hag now has her own adjective).
paul - 10/20/10 00:15
Seriosuly, what the frack is going on - this really makes me angry. What can we really do? It almost seems with such short notice that its just going to happen.

One way to save it would be to make it a state park but that would take all of the wildness out, like at Letchworth where the public is "bared from the river bed."

Zoar Valley is one of the few places in Buffalo where you can just explore and be in nature without Tolls or boundaries. Almost every single time I go its packed with people hiking and fishing.

I get why the state wants to make money from the land, and I am sure that people in Albany see us as a poor state full of green spaces but honestly, there is not all that much accessible green space with water west of the finger lakes/adirondacks.

As a side note, I notice that Little Rock city had a big patch of strip mined, tore up moon surface right in the middle of the park. I think that one is also state land, maybe the same thing is happening.

As for water supply, that water pretty much comes right into our water intake for the city. Its why the west valley nuke site is so dangerous. I read a report that they were able to trace nuclear waste found in Lake Ontario back to that source.
tinypliny - 10/19/10 23:00
Seems like the DEC doesn't deserve its name.

10/19/2010 20:13 #52982

Lamp, jill & kelly, truck
Category: home
the unending gallery of hurricane lamps... Jill, Kelly & I went out to dinner at the hamilton club saturday night. i got new tires and I need a new muffler. Hot dog contest photos soon!

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jbeatty - 10/21/10 13:21
Yeah I was thinking the same thing. What is a gelatin salad? It sounds terrible. Also why does P always seem to be capitalized?
tinypliny - 10/19/10 22:58
Still, a gelatin salad? No, thank you.
heidi - 10/19/10 22:41
There are commas! Salads: Tossed, gelatin, cole slaw. :-)
tinypliny - 10/19/10 22:01
You like Kelly so much, you stenciled her name on your tires?

Tossed gelatin coleslaw. I am not sure I would be overjoyed if I saw that on the menu.

10/17/2010 21:40 #52973

Lamp needs shade, part 2
Category: stuff
Scored a totally awesome lamp shade at A's house today when I dropped nisha off... But it is way too big for the lamp. Darn. In other news, A's little brother backed over an azalea bush in uncle dudley's yard last night. I think she's asking him to replace the azalea, including digging out the old one, and he has to be good to A for a whole year. Not quite sure how his treatment of A fits into the amends...

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tinypliny - 10/19/10 22:07
My favourite books right now are Simon Doonan's awesome body of work.
tinypliny - 10/19/10 22:06
I don't know about that. If "boyfriend" oversize blazers can be a fashion statement, so can oversize lamp shades. Lamp shades are an extension of personal fashion.

(Can you tell I have been reading one too many fashion blogs? In fact, I am obsessed with fashion blogs now. They are such a hoot!)
heidi - 10/19/10 19:43
Uncle Dudley said it's an azalea but I can't tell them apart. (Oh, just read that azaleas are a specific kind of rhododendron :::link:::)

(e:tinypliny) - the shade is too big for the lamp! It is a smashing shade tho. It's currently perched on top of another lampshade on a very plain pole lamp. Uncle Dudley said there's a lamp in her living room that would be flattered by the shade but since I just inventoried almost every lamp in her house, I can't figure out which one. Maybe that boy with grapes (see two posts down).
terry - 10/19/10 19:17
sucks about the shade, but i have hope you will find it!

that bush looks like a rhododendron to me, no?
tinypliny - 10/18/10 01:41
The lamp looks capital!

Heh, Uncle Dudley sounds like the aunts in Saki's works. ;-)

10/17/2010 13:12 #52967

Cute t shirts
Category: home
Order one now! $10

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