Category: ramblings

  • February 21, 2002

    I hate not knowing what is going on… So, at work, I hear rumors of another reorg in technology, but of course… it’s all hush, hush… That really bothers me…

    So.. it seems something is going on and my personality can’t stand the waiting game… I’d like to think my job is not in jeopardy… but hey… nobody’s safe, ever.

    To make myself feel better I updated my resume 🙂 Just in case…

    So, if you know anybody looking for a network engineer, well skilled in Cisco Routers and Switches (CCNP & CCDP)… pretty good with Checkpoint Firewalls… located in Southwestern Pennsylvania (not relocating)… They can write to me here or here.

    Obviously however… web design is not a developed talent. 😉


    We are more social on IRC than generally we are IRL…

    …which made it even more surreal when we actually met some of the people we chat with… (Dalnet) and ended up talking for hours (um, and, there may have been drinking going on…)

    Lisa… liese^

    lisa

    Tom… Burt

    burt

    Kenn… WolfPlex

    kenn

    James… raVeneyes


    How to Tell if You’re an IRC Addict…

    https://web.archive.org/web/20020207230809/http://www.rotfl.com/irc-addict

    Okay, how many of these apply to you? (yah, some of these are corny and old… some are rather applicable though!)

  • February 16, 2002

    Saturday night… where are Montey and I? We are so pathetic >:}

    Let’s see… I’m in the living room on my Linux box, on two IRC networks, and consoled into the sole router I have at home to “practice” on…

    Montey’s in at the computer station in the kitchen… flipping between two computers… he’s just installed XP… so he’s got two keyboards… we both talk in some of the same channels…

    Some people find our lives weird… Ask Montey’s sister and her husband 🙂 they stopped over tonight for a bit. I fear we are rather bad about boring our guests…

    So… I’m getting back into my studying… ah yes, the steam comes out of the ears… I’d gotten rather lackadaisical about learning… I finished my CCNP in August 2000 and my CCDP in May 2001 (yes, it took me nine months to take ONE more test… did I mention I get sidetracked easily…) and haven’t really been keeping up a learning pace… and technology is NOT a field you can get lazy in!

    Work has wound up again and it’s great! I love being busy again… my job constantly evolves… from the one site I took care of in ’99 when I started (incidentally back then we had one network engineer at each site) and now, I’m based out of that site but I work with our corporate network team and take care of many sites… way cool. 😉

    So, lately I’ve been immersed in BGP, which, if you know what it means, you’ll understand why it’s been most fun and educational… and if you don’t know what it means (HI Dad and family!) trust me, it’s one of those topics I babble about and your eyes glaze over 🙂

    Oh, and in late December I decided that I needed to learn about Linux… so now my box is RedHat 7.2, I upgraded my kernel though… to 2.4.17, my printer works, so does my USB web cam… sound card doesn’t… it did with the RedHat install but after I recompiled it didn’t and I don’t care for sound on my computer that much anyway 🙂

    Last night I hooked my router up to it… and stared at the screen stupidly…

    Windows… I use Tera Term, works for telnet or console, but how in the hell do you get to the serial port in Linux? Well, happy to say, I got it… installed minicom and played around with the settings… bingo. Big Smiles!

    Enough rambling for the moment….

  • January 27, 2002

    I have a lot to say… eventually I’ll say it…

    Me…

    Um…

    Well…

    Now…

    Geez…

    I don’t know what to say…

    Let’s see… I’m in networking (routers and switches and cat5, oh my.)

    My husband is also in IT, he works with CTI stuff… (CTI – computer telephony integration)

    I first signed online in June of ’94… with Compuserve.. then I switched to AOL… then Nauticom…

    Then…

    In April of 1996…

    I found the world’s best ISP… The NetConnection…

    www.dp.net

    And here we’ve been for almost six years…


    Oh… and I reasonably suck at HTML… so what you see is about as fancy as it gets.

    E-mail complaints here…


    Okay… the first thing people want to know…

    …does she have a nice rack?

    User Friendly comic strip

    Very funny comic strip…
    www.userfriendly.org


    About Me

    So… me… you want details?

    Ah well and good…

    Married.

    00011101 years old.

    No kids, not now, not ever.

    Two cats though 🙂

    Cats make excellent substitute children and the best part is… you can leave them home alone for a weekend and that’s okay… you can’t do that with human children.

    Jamaica – Dec 2001

    me - dec 2001

  • April 29, 2001

    I’m Heather and my husband is Montey.
    We’ve been married for over six years, have two lovable cats , nine fish and NO kids!
    We work at the same place: [redacted]
    Montey is a Telecom Analyst and I’m the Regional Data Networks Supervisor.
    We’ve been working together now for over a year, Montey started in November of 1998 and then in September of 1999 I joined him. Joining [redacted] was a career change for us both… Montey used to be a carpenter and I was an accountant. Neither of us have looked back!

    We live in Southwestern Pennsylvania, in a big old farmhouse we bought in September of ’98 and moved into in July of ’00 after extensive remodeling. It sits on 2.5 acres and is rather rural. The funny thing is, we weren’t looking for a new house when we found it… we were trying to find a house for Montey’s sister and her husband (they wanted to move from Michigan to SW PA). They came down to see it, didn’t like it and Montey and I both loved it. So here we are. 🙂

  • November 29, 1998 – Plants!

    This page last updated, barely, on November 29th, 1998… My main page is here: http://web.archive.org/web/19981205124711/http://www.dp.net/~twilight

    I like my houseplants!

    Having plants as a hobby is extremely relaxing and healthy. Plants clean the air in your house, converting the CO₂ you breathe out into pure O₂ that you can breathe in… Now that Montey and I both quit smoking, the air in our house is much improved and, with all the plants, very oxygen-rich!

    I like to grow most of my plants from seed. For one, it’s a challenge… Second, when you start a plant from seed it is very adapted to the conditions in your house. After all, it has never known any other conditions to get picky about!

    At current count (July 1998) I have sixty-seven houseplants. That number varies often as I start cuttings or condense two pots into one. The high number of plants is because I have multiple pots of some plants. As far as the different varieties go, I have twenty-seven different varieties (counting all the cacti as one variety).


    One of the plants that I am especially proud of is the devil’s ivy in the picture below. It goes from the top of the stairway railing and cascades down the stairs… It is even fuller and longer now than it was in this picture…

    Aloe vera – Aloe Plant

    I currently have three pots of this. I took the pot I had, separated it into about 10 little 2-inch pots and one 4-inch pot, kept the 4-inch and two of the 2-inch, the rest I took to work and gave away. At last report most of them were doing okay. The ones that I kept didn’t look so good for a while but they’re coming along now. They are again multiplying and sending off babies.


    Araucaria heterophylla – Norfolk Island Pine

    I bought a 4-inch pot that had five Norfolks crowded into it for $3.50 at Lowe’s in December of ’96. I put all five into a 6-inch pot and they’ve gotten quite huge. I’ll likely have to repot them this fall into something a little bigger… I know they often grow as single plants, each in a pot of their own, but I like the effect of them all in one.


    Ficus elastica decora – Rubber Tree

    When I moved in with my husband in April 1992 he had this rubber tree that was one straight stalk covered with leaves. I don’t know what I did to it but it lost all of its leaves except for about five at the top.

    When we moved to our house in November of 1993 I put it in front of the sliding glass door for one more shot at life. It put out new branches and leaves, but the top two feet were pretty spindly so I tried air-layering it… that didn’t work as well as I had hoped, but it shocked the bottom portion into new life!

    It has gotten so huge that Montey had to build it a special platform across the top of the stairwell. It used to spend its summers outside but not this year—if it grew anymore I’m not sure it would ever make it back into the house!!!


    Hedera helix – English Ivy

    For a while it seemed as if this was going to die… it was not looking so healthy. I got worried that the original pot was going to die so I took a cutting in March of ’97 and stuck it in the terrarium.

    Since then it has grown like wildfire! I have it wound around chopsticks stuck in the pot with it and it hangs down the stairwell a few feet. If I were to completely unwind it there would likely be pieces over four to five feet long.

    I bought the original plant for 25 cents off a clearance table at K-mart in 1992—best quarter I ever spent… Besides the big pot and the cutting in the terrarium, I also have a cutting growing in water.


    Maranta leuconeura erythrophylla – Prayer Plant

    This has been hanging on to life, barely, for over a year now… it doesn’t flourish and it doesn’t die… I’ve got one 4-inch pot of it and it just keeps on keeping on.


    Philodendron scandens oxycardium – Heart-leaf Philodendron

    I have two pots of this. A small one hangs on the wall in the living room (part of a Home Interiors hanging), and a tan shallow bowl hangs in a scruffy green macramé hanger… It screams 1970s decor but I adore it.


    Pilea cadierei – Aluminum Plant

    My mother-in-law had a terrarium for fifteen years. When we got it, the only plants left alive in it were Pilea—it had choked out everything else.

    I left two little ones in the terrarium and trim them back when they get big. I also took cuttings and planted them in potting soil, but they got tall and scraggly, so I cut them off and stuck them in water.

    They’ve been growing in a jelly glass of water for over six months now. The roots are healthy and they look just as good as they did in soil.


    Sansevieria trifasciata laurentii – Snake Plant

    I have the yellow-striped variety in a pot I painted in 1990. I like the way they look—so simple.

    I bought two pots of a different type about a year ago, separated them into six pots, and placed them in a rolling container Montey built me. One of those six bloomed this past spring, which seems fairly unusual.

    Scindapsus aureus – Pothos / Devil’s Ivy

    This stuff grows like a weed! It roots so easily in water it would be hard to imagine ever running out of it. If you want some, email me with your address—I’m willing to send cuttings out!

    “(Originally written in 1998: I used to share cuttings by mail—this is no longer something I do.)”


    Sedum morganianum – Burro’s Tail

    I got some cuttings of this from my grandmother and a friend. It doesn’t grow fast but grows steadily. My grandmother’s hangs about six feet off the ground and is almost reaching it now—that’s a goal!

    Mine is doing well with a few strands about 18 inches long. I also have another pot with babies and another container I’m trying to start more in.


    Senecio rowleyanus – String of Beads / String of Peas

    This is a really cool plant but seems rather rare. My step-grandmother gave me cuttings and they’ve grown into a nice plant. I have never seen it for sale.

    I saw similar plants at Lowe’s, but the beads were slightly pointed. Mine are perfectly round.

    It roots easily but grows slowly and takes a lot to look full.


    Syngonium angustatum – Tri-leaf Wonder

    I’ve had this for three years. It never did very well and for a while was barely hanging on.

    Over a year ago I hung it in front of the sliding glass door and it took off! Two months ago it started looking ill again so I tore it apart, replaced the soil, and hung it back up. Now it’s doing well again with new baby leaves.

    I also have two cuttings growing in water.


    Zebrina pendula – Wandering Jew

    I got cuttings of this about two years ago. I currently have one pot that is way too crowded and three jars of water with cuttings growing in them.

    One of these days I’m going to repot it and make it look good again—for now it’s just surviving…

    (This was the first plant I ever killed. My mother gave me one at about age thirteen and told me it was very easy to keep alive… it was dead in mere weeks! Very discouraging!)


    Since this is all I have for my plant pages as of yet, go to GardenWeb: http://web.archive.org/web/19981205124711/http://www.gardenweb.com/

    Houseplants are just a small section of what they discuss…

    If you would rather, you can go back to my main page or you can send me e-mail.

  • December 19, 1997 – Original Homepage

    Fields of Heather

    Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year
    Welcome to our little corner of the net!


    Hello to the Bowlby Library

    The reason that the Bowlby Library has this page as a bookmark is because I was a volunteer there during my senior year at Waynesburg College. It, both the library and the college, are located in Greene County, Pennsylvania, U.S.A., which is rather rural.

    My Uncle Dave and I are both alumni of Waynesburg, my father went to Bloomsburg University, and other family members and friends have gone, or are going to:

    • Penn State
    • Lock Haven University
    • Clarion University
    • Robert Morris College

    By the way, if you are a member of my family or know me, and you know of a college that somebody went to that I don’t have on here… let me know!


    Well, 1998 is almost here, it’s been a busy year! I got a job which I really like and it has kept me busy (which also explains the fact that this page is rarely updated).

    My favorite hobby, and really the only one besides reading that I devote much time to, is my house plants. They even have an entire page devoted to them.


    News Junkie

    I am an admitted news junkie. I think it was the O.J. trial that really set the need for constant news into motion. Now there’s no particular story I follow, I just like to have the sense that I have some clue about what is going on around me.

    If that sounds like you, check out:


    I absolutely love to see the words “you’ve got new mail!” I also would really like to know people’s opinions on this page (criticism welcomed!!!).

    So…

    PLEASE (with sugar)
    send me mail!!!

    nothing like begging, huh?