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ARRRRRRRWhat can I say? All the other kids were doing it.

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Restaurant Inspection Round-Up Resurrection

Remy!I did this feature for a while on the now-deceased Ravenna Nation blog, and I kinda miss it.

Here’s a couple of recent-ish local restaurant inspections:

  • PAIR (March 18) – Proper Consumer Advisory not posted for raw or undercooked foods, inadequate equipment for temperature control, and improper cooling procedures
  • SUBWAY 7347 35th Av Ne (February 25) – In-use utensils improperly stored

Can’t speak for the SUBWAY as I’ve never eaten there, but I’d still take PAIR over them ANY DAY.

Here’s the homepage for King County’s Food Protection Program, should you want to use your facebooking time in a more constructive way.

FREE irises to a good home

Actual iris may or may not look like this.During my latest attempt at making my backyard more a produce section, I have dug up a bunch of irises that I have no other home for.

YOU want ’em? Free delivery and everything!

Not quite sure how many I have…around 15?  Some clumps of the rhizomes may have a few other plants attached — some lilies of the valley, a bit of a fern — and I can’t say I did a careful job extracting them, but, hey, they’re FREE.

First come, first serve. Just email me at rebecca (at) ravennablog.com.

UPDATE: Thank you to Greenwood Kim for offering to give them a good home.

Compost Days are NIGH.

The GOODSDid you get your Seattle Public Utilities CurbWaste & Conserve Newsletter in the mail this week, like I did?

And did you flip right to the back to see what FREE STUFF you get this season, like I did?

Here’s the goods, and how to get them:

Makes sense that Cedar Grove passes along some free compost to SPU users — it’s where all our food waste ends up. Here’s a video tour of the Cedar Grove Compost facility in Everett.

KEEP IT UP, SEATTLE. I’d like four free bags next year.

Signs of life at the former Osaka Sushi

a mountain of soy deliciousness!I mentally noted the missing “For Lease” sign about a week ago.

And just this evening, walking by on the way to Zeeks Pizza, I saw plastic bags covering the windows AND about six people standing around inside.

I’ll hit up my source for these matters sometime this week, see if he knows anything.

I am excited about another cuisine addition to Downtown Ravenna, but, I have to say, I miss Osaka.  It was the first restaurant we took the newborn kid to (had to walk out twice and walk around a bit before he went to sleep).  And I loved the “Dragon Lady,” so dubbed by reviewers on Yelp who are meanies and have too much time on their hands.  She had PERSONALITY, which I found refreshing and, frankly, required of a small, neighborhood eating establishment.

And she would bring the small fry tofu, which he loves to this day.

96 Hour Fitness?

uf da, too heavyNow that I’m old — okay, just mid-30s, but it seems old to me — I’ve decided that I should start taking better care of myself. So I joined a gym, which I attend semi-frequently…when I’m not on the Cadbury Mini-Egg diet that I seem to be following this week.

My gym-of-choice had to be nearby, cheap, and have childcare. And the Northgate 24 Hour Fitness (above Pacific Fabrics, next to the post office) fit the bill. It’s teeny, has no showers, but I can get there quickly, work out, and get out, which is what I wanted anyways.

The bad news: It’s closing.

The good news: Later this year, it’s relocating about a block away, and getting four times bigger.

Woo hoo!

Here’s the original article from the Seattle Times about how gyms around the Puget Sound region and beyond are stepping up to fill empty retail space during this current economic retail pullback.

Picaloo is now open for your “business.”

Ah, nothing like spending a bracing, blustery morning at a composting toilet opening!  Pictures of the exterior, and a bit of info, here. Also in attendance were several key members of the 10-year-long effort to get the thing, cameras from KOMO and KING, and one Ciscoe Morris.

And, yes, there was a toilet paper tearing ceremony.

All the hoopla aside, here’s what you really want to know: HOW TO USE THE THING.

  • The toilet will be unlocked at all hours, at all times of the year (though, once inside, the door is lockable, of course). A motion-detecting security light will pop on at night, and nearly University Prep will be leaving some of their outdoor lights on as well.
  • If you only need the station for urination, use the toilet as you normally would (80% post-consumer content TP is provided), note your contribution to the tally sheet, hit the hand sanitizer, and you’re on your way.
  • If a number two is what you’re there to do, there’s another step: a scoop of wood chips atop your dooty, once you’ve done your duty. The system is designed to break down waste aerobically (in the presence of oxygen); the wood chips provide some space in the waste for the bacteria to do their thing. Again, note your contribution on the tally sheet, sanitize, and go on your way.
  • Should you leave a “personal mess” in the facilities, or track in dirt or such, environmentally-friendly cleaning products and a broom are located inside the facility as well.
  • As for odors from the toilet, there is a solar-powered fan which keeps the people section under negative pressure and vents the poo section out the roof.

Here is a diagram of the toilet at the manufacturer’s website.

Now, before you go driving across town with a stomach full of bran muffins, the Picaloo (we voted on the name today, too) is not openly looking for “donations.” But, should you happen to be in the neighborhood, or checking out the Picardo P-Patch, and your chili dog lunch has met its untimely end, then, well, by all means…you know.

Should you, dear reader, want to know more about the entire endeavor, whether from a usage standpoint or from a How Can I Get One For My Own P-Patch/Backyard/Year-Round Outdoor Preschool, here are two contact points for you:

  • Gwen Hestercamp, Chair of the Composting Toilet Committee: gwenhestercamp (at) hotmail.com
  • Trent Elwing, resident composting toilet know-it-all: trelwing (at) gmail.com

Give a sh*t.

After a year and a half on the wait list, I was VERY HAPPY to find out this week that I finally got my grubby hands on a plot at the Picardo Farm P-Patch.  If you did, too, I’ll see you at the orientation this Saturday, April 3rd.

AND THE EXCITEMENT DOESN’T STOP THERE.

Mr. Hanky!

This Saturday is also the grand opening of Seattle’s first and only publicly-sited composting toilet, also at Picardo.

I challenge you to find a better way to spend your Easter Eve.

Mmm...liquid bread.The Maple Leafer just posted a nice list of northeast pub trivia nights.  Sadly, they’re all past my bedtime, but you may have better luck.

https://ravennablog.com/153/

Storytime is back!

Now that the February is over, Storytime is finally back at the Northeast Branch of the library.  Huzzah!

The master list is here, largely the same as it’s been in the past. But there are a few new dates I want to highlight (descriptions from the website):

  • Family Story Time – Early learning activities with books, music and movement for parents, care givers and a wider age-range of children.  Wednesdays, March 10,  April 7 and May 5 from 4-4:30pm. And Saturdays, March 20 and May 15, 10:30-11am.
  • Pajama Story Time – All ages are welcome for stories, songs, dances and more. The children’s librarian will be wearing her pajamas. You can wear yours, too! Wednesdays, April 21 and May 19, 7-7:30pm.

I can’t thank the library gods enough for ADDING hours to our branch of the library, versus taking them away.

UPDATE: Talked to the Northeast Branch’s children’s librarian today. Time on the library website was incorrect for Pajama Story Time. 7pm is correct.