Neighbours.
Dec. 6th, 2008 10:13 amI live right at the edge of the city centre. Considering the location, it's fairly quiet: no trams close-by and the bigger roads with lots of traffic are a couple of streets away. There is a constant background hum of distant traffic. Except for the occasional boyracer reving his car or the siren of an ambulance you can't make out the individual vehicles.
Instead, we can hear a rooster crowing in the gardens by the mostly disused railway line which gives you a strange illusion of rural life. But he's not the one who, on working days, wakes us nearly every morning at about 4.30. That honour falls to the guy with the moped living in a house across from our backyard. The space before the garages there is covered with noisy gravel and the moped is a bit reluctant to start. It took us a while to figure out what it was.
Today, he left at about 7 to go somewhere. That means I got some quiet computer time before I enter into marking hell for the rest of the weekend.
The house is slowly waking up - I can hear the downstairs neighbours rummaging around, but I've not yet heard the husband's trademark sneeze or their phone. Their dog never barks, but when the grandkid is around, we get our share of their life as proud grandparents.
What do you hear in and around your house on a Saturday morning?
Instead, we can hear a rooster crowing in the gardens by the mostly disused railway line which gives you a strange illusion of rural life. But he's not the one who, on working days, wakes us nearly every morning at about 4.30. That honour falls to the guy with the moped living in a house across from our backyard. The space before the garages there is covered with noisy gravel and the moped is a bit reluctant to start. It took us a while to figure out what it was.
Today, he left at about 7 to go somewhere. That means I got some quiet computer time before I enter into marking hell for the rest of the weekend.
The house is slowly waking up - I can hear the downstairs neighbours rummaging around, but I've not yet heard the husband's trademark sneeze or their phone. Their dog never barks, but when the grandkid is around, we get our share of their life as proud grandparents.
What do you hear in and around your house on a Saturday morning?
no subject
Date: 2008-12-06 12:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-06 01:06 pm (UTC)I don't mind general noise - I used to live on a busy road and wasn't bothered by it, but the moped generates a sudden burst of sounds (garage door, crunching gravel, stuttering engine etc.). Church bells I can ignore, too, if they're not right next to me.
Cows, though, that's something else! I hope they don't have the traditional bells - they make enough noise without them!
no subject
Date: 2008-12-06 01:03 pm (UTC)I'm used to the sound of the passing cars but human voices often wake me up.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-06 01:11 pm (UTC)I used to get the human voices at my parents' place (only it was the small-town version): People coming home from the pubs or just talking on the street - the street is fairly narrow with tallish buildings, so the sound is reflected quite well and drifted up to my fourth-floor window.
But then, we never had any noisy Spanish neighbours!
Here, in the city, we rarely get people providing late-night entertainment out in the street, but when they do, it's usually quite spectacular with long slanging matches and drunken arguments.
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 08:58 am (UTC)Usually...in our flat, I hear rubbish being put down the chute, busses stopping outside our bedroom window, cars, people walking up and down the stairs, the occasional train, Al snoring or talking in his sleep, the boiler kicking in to turn the heating on at 6am and then turning off at 8.30am....just to name a few!
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 09:50 am (UTC)It's good to see you commenting - I have been thinking about you.
I hope you had a good weekend.
*hugs*
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 09:52 am (UTC)Weekend was quite pleasant.
My BP is FINALLY up to 93/74...may stop fainting soon!
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 11:29 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 11:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 12:31 pm (UTC)I'm glad that your BP is improving.
I wish you two could do some sort of a blood pressure exchange with
Even after my surgery my blood pressure was never that low - well, maybe that one time on the first night when I was on my way back from the loo and everything went black for a while. (The bathrooms were much too warm for my liking.) But as soon as I was in bed again with my lower legs propped up everything was well again.
So, I can't imagine what it is like trying to function with such a low BP all the time.
*hugs for you both*
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 09:57 pm (UTC)That feeling is no fun at all.
Hmmm...al is once again playing games online...bed I think. So much for quality time.
xxx
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 10:04 pm (UTC)I'm off to bed now, too - giving up on marking hell, I'm much too tired to concentrate right now.
BTW, postpeople didn't screw up this time! Thanks for the card.
xxx
no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 09:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-12-07 09:52 am (UTC)I like country sounds, but the best is staying close to the sea and being able to hear the surf. So soothing.
It's good to hear from you!
Currently, there's a dog barking here, but it's somewhere outside. Mary, our neighbour's little dog, is much too well-behaved to bark inside.