Saturday, September 6, 2025
Over the Fence
Thank goodness it's the weekend! This has been a long week, with some very busy days. Yesterday, fortunately, was much easier -- I spent several hours in the library's poetry section, weeding old books and trying to make room on the shelves for fresh material.
Many people don't understand book weeding, or question why we do it. But even in areas like poetry, where the information contained within the pages of the books doesn't age, the books themselves do. Libraries eventually find themselves with a lot of old, yellowed, sagging, marked-up poetry books, and libraries that have a carefully edited collection are actually used more effectively than those with shelves and shelves packed full of aging material. As both of my bosses have often said, we are not an archive. Our books are meant to be used.
So, yeah, I weeded out a lot of books -- mostly huge, dense anthologies and literary criticism from the 1960s through the '80s, most of which hadn't been checked out for many, many years. Some were never checked out. Now there's room to breathe over there and the shelves look much fresher. As I've written before, I love weeding -- it plays to my desire for organization and simplifying.
I'm getting more used to my new glasses but I still don't love them. I find I only use the top part of the bifocal lens. The bottom part might be useful if I'm trying to read tiny print on a jar, for example, or maybe on a pharmaceutical package insert. But for my day-to-day work mostly on computers, the top part is fine.
This week I had the garden cam pointed backwards, at the junction of the wooden fence and the brick wall at the back of the garden. This is where animals come in and out of the garden, and I wanted to see how they do it. Here's a quick video that answers the question -- for both foxes and cats. There's a similar point on the other side, and in this way the animals can treat all our gardens as one big hunting and/or exploring ground.
The other day I talked to my quiet neighbor, who lives in the house physically connected to ours on one side. She is a model neighbor -- we never hear her and she keeps pretty much to herself. But as I was moving around the rubbish bins the other day she stopped and asked who was living upstairs. So I gave her the updates about the Russians moving out and this new family moving in, and how pleased I am because they're so quiet compared to the Russians. She agreed, and it never occurred to me that of course she'd been hearing them too through the common wall. Things are much more peaceful for both of us these days!
(Photo: A study in squares and rectangles, taken as I waited for the tube one morning this week.)
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I didn't know foxes could jump so well. May your quiet neighbour live there for a long time.
ReplyDeleteI was also surprised at how smoothly the foxes could make that leap.
DeleteSo, what happens with the books that you decided were too old to be interesting?
ReplyDeleteWe usually donate them to charity or our local book swap, depending on the condition.
DeleteI like your study in squares and rectangles. I spent quite some time just looking at it.
ReplyDeleteIt really jumped out at me as I was standing on the station platform.
DeleteThat’s a big, well-fed, and be-a-u-tiful cat! I, too, would love weeding out the old books. The kind of project I enjoy.
ReplyDeleteYes, that cat doesn't look like it's lacking nutrition!
DeleteWhat are words worth?
ReplyDeleteIn the darkest corner
They hid the Gerard Manley Hopkins
And the Vernon Phillips Watkins
Poems by Edgar Allan Poe
And Robert Frost's "Dust in the Snow"
Till the time for weeding came
"Oh nothing shall be the same"
They even took
The Wordsworth.
Now that was a worthily worded comment!
Delete(Don't worry -- I didn't get rid of everything by any single poet. We still have plenty by all the names you mentioned, except possibly Watkins, who I don't know. :) )
An study with only the slightest hint of a curved line!
ReplyDeleteInteresting seeing the animal highway.
Good to have neighbourly contact, and a more peaceful life now!!
Yes, she's exactly the kind of neighbor I like -- she's polite and friendly and mostly keeps to herself.
DeleteGravity is not such a big deal for some. Boing, over the fence so effortlessly. I do love your garden cam.
ReplyDeleteI like it too -- it's been fascinating to see what's wandering around out there at night.
DeleteDo you remove the book labels before handing them over to a charity shop? Who is responsible for the transport? Hopefully not you?
ReplyDeleteThere are few things more annoying than noisy neighbours. Good that those days are over.
The school sometimes transports the books, but not me personally. We can't remove identifying labels but we stamp "DISCARDED" over them, and cross through the bar code with a Sharpie pen.
DeleteIsn't it nice to have peaceful neighbors now? When I lived in an apartment, I could hear everything through the walls, and I mean everything.
ReplyDeleteYeah, that is no fun! I have never heard anything, um, untoward. Just construction noise and arguing!
DeleteI didn't even know you had another adjacent neighbor. The Russians took up all the oxygen. I thought it was a duplex, just the two apartments. Evidently that poor quiet woman suffered from them too.
ReplyDeleteIt a semi-detached house, so it's attached to a mirror image house on one side. Our house is then divided into two flats, upstairs and down.
DeleteWhen you purge the books, do they go into a book sale fundraiser or are they sent for recycling or donated? I can see why there is little point to hold onto things never checked out or in bad condition. I loved the video. There's something about seeing animals jump a tall fence that amazes me. Love that cat's markings. And three cheers for quiet neighbors -- may they stay that way!
ReplyDeleteThey're usually donated, even if they're not in great shape. The book charities can decide how to dispose of them.
DeleteI love purging things that aren't used and most often give them away to friends and charities who may need them. It keeps my corner of the world a little more organized.
ReplyDeleteIt makes a huge difference to keep down clutter!
DeleteAmazing how the foxes and cats can just leap over that fence with no trouble at all. Imagine if you had to get over that fence!?!
ReplyDeleteI know! They make it look so effortless, and yeah, I WOULD struggle!
DeleteSuch healthy-looking animals who stalk the jungles of the London gardens! I always think of foxes as being sort of cat-dogs because of the way they can jump and hang out in trees.
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure I've ever seen a fox IN a tree, though I know they can be treed. (Apparently that's only true of gray foxes, I read just now. Red foxes don't have claws that allow them to climb. Who knew?!)
DeleteInteresting that they only jump over the wood fence. Looking at that photo it caused me to wonder why our buildings are most often solid blocks of squares or rectangles.
ReplyDeleteMost economical use of space, I suppose? Most building lots are square or rectangular, and the houses probably mimic that to use as much buildable space as possibe.
DeleteSome books get some hard usage and look terrible but there are others that just grow old. I always watched the weeded pile and picked out a few books for myself.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I always have to be careful not to weed books just because they're worn -- because sometimes that's an indicator of popularity!
DeleteI intend on skipping the bifocal lenses next time I get glasses. I am nearsighted and am happier taking my glasses off to read or look at things close up. I am paying more for the bifocals, a feature I rarely use.
ReplyDeleteI feel the same way. I paid a huge amount of money for lenses that were hopeless!
DeleteThe night activity in your beautiful walled garden always surprises me. Nice video. I had no idea a fox or cat could jump from the ground straight up to the top of a fence. How tall is the fence?
ReplyDeleteQuiet neighbors are always appreciated. With the new neighbor, you live in blissful quiet.
I'm guessing the fence is six feet tall, more or less?
DeleteAll of that animal activity in your garden is fascinating. It makes me think about that house I was living in a few years back. It had a huge back garden but I only occasionally saw mostly neighborhood cats walking around back there. Now I wonder if there might have been much more activity at night that I never got to see.
ReplyDeleteI would do this in any house I occupied, just to see what's up. I've even thought of bringing it to our vacation rentals but I haven't done it yet!
DeleteI wonder if the Russians are annoying their new neighbors already--wherever they moved to. It's hard for me to get rid of books (just in case) but I can understand the need. Glad you are adjusting to the glasses; I do love my progressive lenses but am afraid to get them done anywhere except the place where I've always gone. I think they can be too easy to mess up.
ReplyDeleteMy understanding is they moved to a house, so hopefully they don't have any neighbors at such close quarters!
DeleteOccasionally back in the day I heard the phrase “spry as a fox”. I guess that shows why.
ReplyDeleteThey are very spry!
DeleteHow nice to have a chat with your neighbour; it must be some bit of consolation to know you and Dave weren't the only ones going through that. I never realized you shared a common wall as well as a common ceiling/floor. Would that house have been single occupancy at some point in its history, or has it been added to?
ReplyDeleteI love that cat's beautiful markings! And I'd like to be able to jump as effortlessly as both the cat and the fox. Maybe if I work on it :)
It was originally what's called "semi-detached," so like a duplex with a shared central wall and two mirror-image houses on either side. Our house was then subdivided into upstairs and downstairs flats.
DeleteAh . . . thanks for the clarification. The only duplex-type of houses I've seen have been the small, shoebox kind. Never thought one could be large and interesting, which just shows how limited my experience is!
DeleteI like seeing that cat with the gorgeous markings in the daylight.
ReplyDeleteIt IS a beautiful cat, isn't it? I wish I knew where it lived but it's here every night.
DeleteCodex: Well. That's fugly.
ReplyDeleteSteve: A study in squares...
Codex: Oh!
My father solved that problem by going back to regular glasses and carrying a nifty magnifying glass. (The handle twisted and doubled as a cover.)
I can see why he did that. Fortunately, the need to read very small print is not that common.
DeleteI understand the weeding of old books, I do the same here at home, but if the book being weeded is a much loved favourite I'll search ebay for a replacement before tossing the battered falling apart one.
ReplyDeleteYeah, makes sense. I've replaced many a book in my day!
Delete