Monday, November 24, 2025
Little Green Oranges
The Hellebores are coming out again. Mrs. Kravitz's Polish gardener used to call them "Christmas roses" -- before he vanished, as all Mrs. K's gardeners eventually do. I think she fires them all. Anyway, I still think of Hellebores by that name. The white ones are blooming now -- the red ones haven't appeared yet and always come a bit later.
Speaking of Mrs. K, I haven't seen her in ages, or even heard her being belligerent with her gardeners. Of course it's not exactly a gardening time of year, so she may just be indoors, but normally I see some sign of her. I think she must be away again. And our neighbors upstairs are so well-behaved we barely know they're there. It's quite a change from how things used to be around here!
No Olga, no noisy neighbors -- what's my blog coming to?!
We had a bit of a scare yesterday. I was going through the bank statement when I found a charge for $31.72 -- yes, in U.S. dollars -- that I did not recognize. The debit was named UNHYYTERJP2, which was not helpful, and the charge came from Hong Kong. Of course this sent up alarm bells right away. I hadn't ordered anything online, and I asked Dave if he'd ordered anything and he said no.
It seemed a very weird and specific amount to be fraudulent, but I racked my brains and could come up with no legitimate reason this would be on our bank statement. So I tried to call the bank. This led to a vortex of automated phone hell that eventually told me their fraud office was closed (!) and I'd have to call back on Monday. I couldn't report it online unless I had their app, which I do not because I don't do any banking on my phone, ironically for security reasons.
When I Googled that payment name, I found a discussion thread of people questioning transactions with similar names, and they all had to do with Apple Pay. I don't use Apple Pay, but Dave does. So I suggested he go back through his payment history to see if anything would explain that charge. He wasn't sure how to do it, but he figured it out -- and BINGO! It turns out he ordered a board game online for his Dad and then forgot about it.
I was so relieved I forgot to be mad at him. I had visions of reporting fraud and having our cards canceled just as we are about to go to Tenerife later this week. What a headache that would have been.
I moved our little Mandarin orange tree outside again, now that the weather has warmed up. It has numerous little oranges on it (above) and seems to be having a very productive year. That spidery thing to the right of the fruit is a fallen leaf from the Russians' miniature Japanese maple on their terrace upstairs. (Yes, they moved, but they left all their plants behind with an automated watering system.)
Otherwise yesterday was quiet. I read more, took care of all the houseplants, and did some minor housework. Aside from the banking scare, a nondescript Sunday.
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Codex: Excellent sleuthing, Detective Reed. Well you're right apps aren't great. There used to be 1800s for that 24/7 no more?
ReplyDeleteThe kids reading under the couch is too funny.
You must have been so relieved to find out that the mysterious entry on your bank statement was legitimate!
ReplyDeleteIn German, hellebores are called Christrosen, literally "Christ's Roses", fitting in with the usual time of their blossoms coming out around Christmas.
After the icy blast and frosty mornings of last week, I think a Sunday at home in the warm sounds perfect, it's what I did.
ReplyDelete"a vortex of automated phone hell..." Christ Almighty! We have all been there. Glad you unravelled the payment query. Nice of Dave to help you sort it out. Tenerife eh? I forecast that you will taking a lot of great pictures there.
ReplyDeleteWhy they can't make what turns up on a bank statement simple?!
ReplyDeleteAnother one confusing is when a shop is in a group...but payments only get labelled as from their hq...and you think..I've never been there,..!
Apart from the banking issue, it sounds like a good weekend. Lovely to see the Christmas roses and the mandarins! I love seeing things bloom when nothing else seems to be!
ReplyDeleteIt would be very helpful if companies made their names very clear for online banking transactions. Many the time I've scratched my head, but later worked it out. I do rather miss the Mrs Kravitz tales.
ReplyDeleteWhat a relief that you solved the mystery on your bank statement. That has happened to me before too, only to discover that the payment was legit.
ReplyDeleteOh Dave!!
ReplyDeleteI don't do any banking by phone for that same reason, so I'd be freaking out to see some weird charge, too.
Tracking payments can be very irritating and time-consuming.
ReplyDeleteGlad you solved the payment mystery. My friend recently fell for a scam and she had an awful time getting her credit cards straightened out again - very stressful!
ReplyDeleteHow nice that you have another getaway planned!
I have gone through similar credit card exercises more often than I care to. I wish the descriptions were a little "more descriptive".
ReplyDeleteAnother similar thing caught me a few months back. I charged something on my credit card but when I looked at the receipt, the last four digits of my card number were different. I couldn't figure that one out for awhile until I noticed other receipts, all with different last four numbers. Turns out, that when I use my phone wallet app to pay, something I am doing more often these days, it generates random single use numbers for each transaction but somehow they get funneled to the correct account. I really like that feature since it prevents people from getting my actual card number should the store's system get hacked.