Thursday, December 6, 2012

Playa Trip - mid way

Oh how spoiled I feel! After four days on this vacation, I finally feel relaxed. I don't know why that is, but it takes me some time to get into the vacation spirit, not having to plan anything, everything being right here, all served to us, all planned. It's great, just takes some time getting used to it. Everything is fantastic; the weather couldn't be any better, our room is right on the beach, and we have VIP treatment. And the food; Oh. The. Food. I feel constantly stuffed. With such abundance it's almost impossible to take just a little. So we always feel our plates and leave barely breathing. :) Tonight we were at a Brazilian restaurant where they kept bringing out 6 kinds of meat on skewers throughout the evening. It wasn't until, we left and were dragging our feet that I realized we didn't have to try everything! Our gold bracelet got us VIP treatment,so we ate being extra pampered. Twice already we got champagne with fruit or chocolate strawberries in our room, we have special section on the beach, and we get to dine at a la carte restaurants every evening. There I go with food again! It cannot be avoided. I came to realize the December is perfect time to vacation. January two years ago was a big more chilly, but now is great temperature. The hotel is also all decorated for Christmas, kinda surreal near the beach, but it also gives it extra special look. As I type this, we are enjoying some Latino music evening entertainment, and my feet are just etching to get on the dance floor. We got some practice each day with dance and Zumba time on the beach. Oh, speaking of entertainment, mom won bingo game today. The price was a fanny pack - which she actually wanted to get for back in Bosnia. :) Yeah, it will be just as hard getting back to reality!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

Playa Trip - take 2

My first big vacation this year! It was hard to wait for it after my trips to Australia, Uganda, Ireland, and Bosnia in the last few years, and nothing planned for this one. I knew I had to use up some ten vacation days this year or I would loose the at the end of the year. And with mom coming to visit, I decided to take this beach trip with her. To make the planning less stressful on me, we are gong to the same place we did two years ago - Playa del Carmen.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

"Mini" Arrived!

My iPad Mini arrived today! I preordered it on the first day, Nov 2nd, and the cell models are just now being delivered. I wanted to make sure it arrived before our trip to Mexico, which is in less than two weeks. I am happy with it so far, but it's going to take some time adjusting to small keypad. It of course is not for long typing, but this so far has not been bad. Of course, I still have to figure out all the many options and security/privacy settings, and figure out which apps I need. The screen size is actually not as small as i I feared it would. The mini can fit in purse, and regular iPad would be too big to carry around. My only complaint so far is actually with the Smart Cover. In the keyboard position, the bent cover doesn't stay in the position and the iPad keeps falling on the surface. Maybe this design is just too small for the mini.

Friday, October 26, 2012

The Day I Became a US Citizen

14 years, 1 month, and 11 days.

That is how long this journey was for me since I left Bosnia on 08/14/1998 to come to the US. And mountains of papers and thousands of dollars later, here I am - a US citizen!

It was a glorious day. I picked up my sister-in-law and we drove to the Austin Delco center. I was supposed to report there at 11am, but the actual ceremony was not starting until 2PM. The traffic was at a stand still on the access road leading to the location. We were barely moving for about 15 minutes at the stop light. Other candidates who had someone with them in the car, were leaving their vehicle and heading toward the building on foot - in fear of being late. That's the fear that years and years of being in the immigration system has ingrained into the people. This was the last stop on their long journey, and they didn't want to jeopardize their getting to the finish line by getting there later than told. It was almost a comic scene.

I knew that they can't process hundreds of candidates at exactly the same time, so we waited our way through the traffic and were in line at 11.20. They had us divided in four groups, at four entrances of the center, based on the color of the paper we received in the mail. I was in the blue section. It was a beautiful day, sunny and with just enough breeze to make it comfortable. Another friend of mine joined us in line few minutes later, and we slowly made it inside the building, where the line was even longer.



The officers checked our papers, made sure (twice) that we have our green cards with us, and sent the guests to find their seats. I took a picture with and said good buy to my green card, a piece of plastic that I worked so long for. In exchange they gave us a packet with some booklets, a letter from the president, folder for the certificate, and a US flag. I was seated at about 12.30, and again happy that I wasn't first in the line and have been sitting in those small bleachers seats. When everyone was seated, they had us give an oath, something about everything on our application still being true (we didn't recite anything, just said "I do" at the end), and at about 1.15 we were free to take a break.




I met with my friends who arrived in the meantime and we went outside. Emilia and I ate our lunches we brought with us, and took some pictures. In no time, we had to go back in for the ceremony. The entire thing lasted about 40 minutes. It was presided by a judge. There was a "prayer", procession of guards in civil war uniforms with flags, some speeches, most of which were good and inspiring, kids sang 2-3 songs. The immigration office person then gave a report on the candidate: there were 970 of us, from 95 countries (including Yugoslavia - which doesn't exist!). Around me were folks from Guyana, Kenya, India, Pakistan, China, France, Island... They called out all countries one by one and had people from those countries stand up. I didn't see it, but my friends think they saw one other person stand up for Bosnia. Mexico, of course, had the biggest representation, and huge applause echoed afterwards. Russia also got an applause.

Entrance From Citizenship Oath Ceremony Day

America the Beautiful From Citizenship Oath Ceremony Day

Any objections? From Citizenship Oath Ceremony Day



Once we were all standing, the judge asked two things: If there is anyone who is not ready or agrees to to take the oath of citizenship as it written and anyone who is not ready to pledge allegiance to this country (or something like that). Of course, no one went forward to disagree! The judge then read the pledge, we had our right hands up, and then responded with "I do". The acoustics and sound system were no that great, so it was hard to hear all he was saying, but I do have a copy of it! And just like that, we were officially US citizens!


It took another 20-30 minutes to shuffle everyone out of the seats and distribute the certificates. I checked it multiple times to make sure all information is correct. Hundreds of people were mulling on the gym floor, smiles all around, taking pictures, and a sense of relieve, and almost disbelief. Out long journey, each with its own story, has converged here on the gym floor and now we are all the same - all US citizens!


Our group was the among the last to receive the papers, so by the time we got done with picture taking in front of the flag, there were barely anyone else around. I also wanted to register to vote there, because it was convenient, and there was no shortage of registration volunteers. The YNN, Austin news TV station was also there. After the ceremony they wanted to talk to some of the new citizens who registered to vote., and my friend volunteered me for an on camera interview. The story aired that evening, and bellow you can find a blur from their their web site, (I copied it here because I don't know how long their stories stay on the site.)


We finally left the building at 3.45PM, just as the traffic was easing out. I wanted to celebrate with some American deserts, so a few of went to Chez Zee, an American Bistro. We had American apple pie, pecan pie, key-lime pie, American coffee, and American water (with ice). Of course I had to share with the waiter that I was celebrating becoming an America citizen.


After dropping Emilia home (finally - dear things was with me the whole day!), and a quick hello with my brother, I went home to change and rest a bit before going out to dinner. And in the theme of the day, we went out for some American BBQ at Rudy's. We even had American beer - which I had just a handful of times, if ever, before.


It was such a fun and exciting day!

Thank you all for celebrating it with me.


Emotions run high as 1,000 obtain American citizenship

By: Sebastian Robertson

Tuesday was a day filled with emotion at the Delco Center in East Austin when people from some 80 countries became U.S. citizens.
Federal Judge Lee Yeakel presided over the hour-long ceremony, handing about 1,000 people a certificate stating they were American citizens.
A Bosnian woman by the name of Zvezdana Stojakovic was thrilled about her accomplishment—it took her 14 years, one month and 11 days to obtain citizenship.
"I don't think you can explain it in words, unless you have been through the process, and so many people work and there are so many steps, that it is just such a relief to be at this spot and know that now I am just one of the citizens like everyone else here," she said.
For many of the new Americans, their first act as a U.S. citizen was registering to vote. Various voters’ organizations were on hand to make sure they left as registered voters.
Among the qualifications to become a citizen, they all had to be at least 18 years old, hold a green card and have lived in the United States for at least five years.
They also had to pass a civics test, and many of the questions on that test cover the history of our country. Click here to check out a sample test.

Saturday, September 22, 2012

New Guest Bedroom

My brother moved out, again, and I think this time it's pretty much for good. 

There was some pondering/melancholy over that fact, but to look at the positive, I decided to reclaim that room of the house and give it a makeover. 

He had a bed and a coffee table with tv and stereo in that room, dresser in the closet, and bunch of stuff just laying around. It was quite a mess, and not a pretty sight to look at at the end of the long hallway. I had him empty it all out, and all that was left was bed and the dresser. 

Clean slate. (literally, this was how it looked after hours of cleaning)


Since the two items in the room were from IKEA, I looked what else they have that would match. And I found all the stuff for the bedroom on their website. Everything but mattress and pillows is from that store! I should contact their marketing department or something to advertise. :)



And it all started with that poster my SIL found at their previous apartment when someone moved out, and it also is from IKEA. It was falling apart when they were moving out their stuff from my house, so they left it behind. It was an inspiration for the whole room!


My mom will probably stay in this room when she visits, even though she was used to "her" room next door. She'll have the choice, but I think the decision will not be hard. I almost wanted to move in!

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Citizenship: Oath Ceremony Scheduled

Today I received a letter that I've been scheduled for the naturalization oath ceremony!

September, 25th, 2012, 11AM, at the Delco Activity Center.


I was encouraged to invite guests, and I really hope some would be able to join me, even though it's on a Tuesday. I am supposed to report there at 11AM, and the actual ceremony starts at 2PM. I haven't been to one of these before, but here is one explanation I've found to the question how long these ceremonies last:

It really depends on the actual size of the Ceremony and on when the Judge shows up. All the applicants for naturalization first have to present their Notice. You need to complete the questions on the back and sign it before you get in line. An Officer will check the answers with you and at some point someone will take your greencard and any re-entry permits that you have. You will be seated, it may be assigned seating in groups according to a particular digit in your A# or it might be first in-first-seated. It depends on the seating arrangement and other logistics, staffing etc. 

You'll sit and wait until everyone is seated. There may be preliminary speakers, the judge usually says something they hope is inspiring, then the Oath, the Pledge, the Anthem, they should play a video message from the President, and finally, they hand out the Certificates... Some ceremonies have Passport agents there to collect passport applications. Some ceremonies have folks there from non-partisan voter registration, either the Board of Elections employees or a group such as the Laegue of Women Voters to supply voter registration forms, help you fill it out and hand it in.

Oath: http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/usc...00b92ca60aRCRD

And here you can find some photos from the oath ceremony at the Delco center from two years ago.

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Dyeing Wood

Pet toys are not cheep.
The purpose of pet toys is to get destroyed.
When you add those two together... well, it kinda doesn't make sense to pay big bucks for something that will be shredded into pieces.

So, I started making bird toys myself. I got different kinds of beads, ropes, chains, bells, links, wood blocks,... bunch of parts to cover the basics. It cost me about $60, including shipping. To that I added old toy parts I already had, and shreddable material like egg carton box pieces, wrapping tissue paper, paper cups, straws,... and so far I already built over 20 toys!

I still needed more wood pieces, and I calculated that it would be cheaper get wood by foot, cut it to different sizes, drill holes. A quick trip to hardware store, and I brought home bunch of pine slats of different thickness and shapes, adding to 6ft, for just over $3.

Now, plain pine wood is kinda boring. Birds do see colors, and usually like more colors that are similar to colors of their feathers. So, to continue this DIY toy project, I tried to color the wood myself. Of course, the color has to be from all natural, edible source. I considered coloring with vegetables, but knowing from dyeing Easter eggs that only good color I got was purple from red onions, I decided to try something else. Koolaid!

I got unsweetened Koolaid packages; orange, lemon-lime (green), cherry (red), and tropical punch, which came in a blue package but is actually just darker red color. I mixed each package with 1 tsp of lukewarm water, 1/2 tsp of rice vinegar, 1/2 tsp of rubbing (Isopropyl) alchocol, and 2-3 drops of corresponding Wilton gel icing color.

And voila!


I string these on some cotton rope, maybe with beads in between, and I got a toy for fraction of the cost of those in pet stores. 

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Property Appraisal Protest

Just got done with another successful appraisal protest at the Travis Central Appraisal District office.

Unlike the last time, I felt unprepared this year. Last year I procrastinated with sending in a request for appeal until, literary, the last day, the last minute actually, and since it was past their last pick time for the day at the post office, the stamp showed one day later and the district rejected it. Well, this year, I at least sent in the form on time. But then I didn't think I have hard enough data to prove the appraised value was too high.

My house was appraised this year at $190,400. Down from $192K from last year, but I still thought that was high, and especially after I checked the value on Zillow.com and it showed to be around $150K at the beginning of the year. That was a huge drop from $215K in February '11, according to that web site. And not all the areas of my neighborhood showed that drop, so I knew I had to challenge that appraised value.

But my data gathering didn't really start until few days ago. There was one house on my street, very similar to mine, just a bit larger, that was on sale for $189,500, for more than a month, but then it seemed to just disappear from the market. Yesterday morning, I was able to find out that it actually sold for $182,500, with $10K extra to the buyer for repairs. I was going for $187,500 based on that house. That was actually my only argument, but I knew I needed more. 

Then just yesterday afternoon, I learned that I wouldn't be able to use a sale from this year to protest the value appraised (but I will for next year!). I was able to get some comps from couple of realtors, and I felt my case was slowly building up. I also remembered, just yesterday, that I might be able to get the appraised value from the refinancing I did back in December, but since it was a no-closing cost refi, the bank didn't order the appraisal again, and just used the previous value of $187,500. Still, I thought that might help, and took with me the refinancing packet from the bank that showed that market value. 


So, my 3 arguments for lowering the value to $187,500 were:
1. Market value of $187,500 the bank used
2. Slightly bigger house on my street sold for $182,500. 
3. Dozen of comps that sold, or were listed but never sold, in that price range.


I realize a $3K decrease in value is very little, <$100 probably, in taxes, but I felt if I don't challenge this every year, the value just keeps going up, and little by little that adds up.


My informal hearing was scheduled for 8.30am. Reading back on my experience from 2 years ago, I was reminded that I can pretty much show up for this informal hearing any time. I was also surprised that this year I was scheduled 3 months earlier than last time, so I didn't know if that would mean more or less crowds. I showed up at the office at 8:52am, signed in and set down. I was the only one there waiting. In less than couple of minutes someone came and called my property out (again, didn't want to butcher my name), a nice man. 


We chatted small talk a bit while he pulled up the records, how he used to live in that neighborhood, I asked about when the county lines were made (there was a map above our heads)... He then briefly showed me the 4 comps the county used. For some reason I didn't receive a copy of those when I requested the appeal (apparently, bellow a check-box, I was supposed to write on a line that I want those copies - good to know for next time). The values were bellow $180,000. He said, based on those, he could go down to $177,400! That's $13K decrease! and I didn't even open my packet, or make any arguments. 


There were two houses sold on my street, bigger than mine, so the county calculated their adjusted values, and they were around there. I commented how I didn't even showed him my papers, but he said with that many properties on sale, they can just go by those. So he did. I just signed two papers, and was out by 9:00am.


Another quick and positive experience at TCAD. Another happy customer!

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Citizenship: In Que for Oath Ceremony

I was checking today the USCIS site to see if my case moved to the next stage, which is Decision, but it jumped from being in Testing and Interview stage few hours ago to Oath Ceremony just now.

Oath Ceremony

On July 19, 2012, we placed your application in the oath scheduling que. We will send a notice when the ceremony is scheduled.....

Naturalization Applicants: you will receive your certificate at your oath ceremony. You can expect to be scheduled for an oath ceremony within 45 days of receiving your recommended approval... 


So exciting!

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Citizenship: The Interview

Today I had my citizenship interview. And I passed! :) It has been long day...

5:00 AM Alarm went off
I set the radio alarm, cell phone alarm, and home phone alarm. All 5 minutes apart, in that order. Since I didn't get a good night sleep the night before (because of a bizarre knocking noise that kept on throughout the night, me thinking it was an animal or termites or house moving because of all the rain - only to discover in the morning some bug was stuck on the window screen and was able to make so much noise by tapping her whatcha-ma-call-it claw thing in her mouth...) But I digress. I felt tired and went to bed early, 10PM the night before, but not being used to such an early bed time, had trouble falling a sleep. At some point, I heard my home phone alarm go off. I looked at it, and wondering why I didn't hear the other two first, I remembered that I never set the home phone clock correctly after the time change, and then panicked not knowing what time it really was, am I an hour late, ...and then looked over to my radio clock. It was 3:30 AM. It was just a dream! No alarm went off yet. Phew! I turned around, and, in what seemed like just a few moments, it was 5 and time for me to get up.

5:30 AM Left the house
The appointment was for 8 AM, in San Antonio. Which is just around the rush hour. I didn't want to risk it. Google Maps told me it should take about 1.30 min to get there. I gave me another 30 min cushion for the traffic, because I wanted to arrive 30 min before the appointment. Which meant, leave at this hour when there should be barely anyone on the road. But there was more traffic than I thought.

6:55 AM Arrived at the USCIS building in S.A.
Not a bad travel time at all. Under 90 min. No rush hour traffic in Austin, and just some delays for the last 10 miles. On the way, I listened to the CD with interview questions, and sipped on my coffee, trying to wake up. The location of this building is really not ideal for spotting when coming I35 N. To turn East under the highway, you come to an awkward stop sign, not a light. It's one of those two-way access roads, and there is a stop sign on the other side, too, with cars turning in directions you wouldn't expect them to. Then, that street merges into two others, and even though there is a sign right at the merge point for the INS building, there are two buildings with no obvious markings on them for what offices there are. Plus, some construction is going on over there, and there are orange blockades and no visitor parking signs... Needless to say, confusing, especially if you are running late. I was so glad I had time to spare. I asked couple of guards, who were getting ready to raise the flags, where to park, and then saw a huge vertical sign for address number of the building. I guess I just needed to look up.

7:40 AM Entered the USCIS building
To kill some time I drove around a bit, sat in the parking lot watching the sun rise (which is not really glamorous when it's behind buildings, fences, and power lines), and with all the moisture fogging the windows on the outside (again glad I didn't have to squirm through the windows while driving), I finally went inside. Went through the security screening, turned in my appointment letter, and set in the large waiting room. There were 4 other people in there already.

8:00 AM Announcement
In those 20 minutes, another at least 20 people walked in. Only 3 other caucasians. An officer then asked if anyone was without the appointment papers, and told us how they'll call us in a bit. The work day has started at the USCIS.

8:05 AM First name called
They started calling names, in no particular order it seemed. It actually even seemed as if they were calling people who arrived later, first. Possibly they just took the appointment letters from the top, as they were stacked when people walked in. Or maybe just those who were supposed to call us who arrived earlier were not ready yet.

8:20 AM My name was called
David, the officer handling my name, checked my green card, greeted me, and we took the elevator up to his office. We chatted on the way. He asked me if I still wanted to do this. Apparently, some people, he said mainly from the UK, change their mind at the last minute, even right before the oath ceremony. I said "yes, I am ready to get this over with". He seemed pleasant, held the door for me, pulled up the chair for me. When I set down, he told me I should actually remain standing until I take the oath! Should have remembered that from the video. I swore to tell the truth and nothing but the truth, and then set down.
We first went through the application, still chit-chatting every now and then, about how he almost went to Bosnia with the army, but instead ended up in Somalia. And about how he had to get up really early the other day, too, when he was staying in a hotel on an army base and they sing some song on the speakers and the crack of dawn. I was still not fully awake, so I don't remember what I had to say.
He asked me about my employer, marital status, children, if I had any taxes issues, tickets,...He asked if I had any travels since filling for the citizenship, and I understood he meant about all those travels I had in the last 5 years that I had to put in the application, so I said yes, only to realize after few moments what he actually meant. After giving good marks with red pen on all pages of the application, we were ready for the interview part.
He started asking me questions, while still looking between his computer screen and turning over application papers, and not really looking at me directly. He even joked right before it that since I am one of his educated clients, he will give me the hard questions. He didn't. Here are the questions he asked, in no particular order:
1. What is the name of our national anthem?
2. How old do citizens have to be to vote for President?
3. What major event happened on September 11, 2001, in the United States?
4. Why does the flag have 13 stripes?
5. What ocean is on the West Coast of the United States?
6. What is the “rule of law”?
This last question was actually somewhere in the middle, and I guess I just heard "law" and automatically went to "What is the supreme law of the land?" question and answered - the Constitution. As I said, I was not fully awake yet. He paused his looking through the papers and looked at me, I realized what I said, and corrected myself. He just said "you got me there for a second" and continued with the questions.

Passed the Civics test!

Next was the English reading and writing test. I had to read:
- How many Senators do we have?
and then, after he said it, I had to write
- We have one hundred senators!

Passed the English test!

Then I had to print and sign in cursive my full name (and while telling me what to do, he explained that cursive is to try to connect the letters as best as I could - duh) on a piece of scrap paper, and then, again after his detailed explanation of which goes which, sign it in the same way on some document. And we were done!

I asked when I can expect the oath ceremony. Since I live in Austin, he said it would probably be on Sep 25th, with several hundred other people. I think he said at the Palmer event center - but I am not positive. I asked if I could maybe move it so that my mom, who is coming in mid October, could come, but he said they can't wait that long. Plus, he said that they will send me a notice letter just 7 days before the oath, and she would have her ticket long before that, so if that date changes, she still wouldn't be here. I'll just stick with what they give me - it's not that important to mom to come.

We shook hands, he congratulated me, and then escorted me down. Those 20 minutes went by so quickly, and I wondered out loud about it.

8:40 AM (I usually just wake around this time!) Walked out of that USCIS building
Hopefully for the very last time!

I am so relieved I am done with all the paperwork and preparations, and all that is left is the oath ceremony!

Woohoo!

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Memory of Queen Elizabeth Park

I was looking through some National Geographic pictures, from all over the world, and as soon as I saw this one.

And I instantly knew where it was from: Queen Elizabeth park. Because I've been there! And got almost the same pictures, sans their quality, of course. :) They still have the same place mats and chair covers.
.



Alas, no big trips this year for me, so far. I still have 10 days that I have to use up, or loose them, so I'll probably go for a week to Mexico with mom when she comes in the fall. And the rest of those 10 days...maybe I just take each Friday off!

Monday, June 18, 2012

After 3 Months

Yesterday marked 3 months since I brought Ficho-Pricho home on St. Patrick's day. He is almost 5 months old now. We've seen quite a change from the timid little bird he was at first. Then and now:


He is super active now, manages to fly across the room even with wings clipped, and hops around on his play-stand like a finch. He is super chatty, and always tries to out-loud us when we speak. Loves the kisses and head rubs, and when he's on me he constantly touches my lips to kiss him back. :)

He is a good eater, even though he's still at just 40 grams! He started eating some pellets, but readily goes for his fruit/veggie bowl with apples, broccoli, peas, carrots corn bread, sweet potato, greens, sprouts,... Not a fan of berries yet, but will try them. Doesn't think peppers are food.

He is an avid chewer and toy destroyer. I pretty much have to replenish his balsa shredder once a week, wine toys are gone within days, and pine slats have good chunks missing, too. He's getting much better at foraging.

He loves to bathe in his water dish. He knows to hold down food and toys with his foot. Examines the tent every night before going in.

And here are also some videos of his "firsts", and how long after bringing him home he achieved those milestones.
First day of stepping up after 2.5 days.
First time out of the cage after 5 days.
First time "talking" with us aftert 6 days. (he was mute up to this point)
First head sratch after 10 days.
First foraging for toys after 2 weeks.
First foraging for food after 3 weeks.
First bath (outside of his water bowl) after 2 months.
First game after 2 months.

Little spoiled brat! :)


Friday, June 8, 2012

Citizenship: Interview Letter Received

Yesterday I received the letter from USCIS outlining the details for my interview.

Wednesday, July 18th, at 8am in San Antonio!

8AM! In San Antonio!

Couldn't these people have checked that I live in Austin before scheduling me for such an early time in another city? Urgh! There is an option to reschedule by sending in this same form they sent me back, with explanation of why I need it rescheduled. There is no option to request a certain date or time, just to request that the appointment basically be moved from the currently scheduled time because that's the time you can't make it. But from what I read about it, it's not recommended unless it's really an emergency, like if I would be out of the country. And even then people/attorneys recommend rescheduling your flight rather than this interview. If rescheduled, my case could go to the end of the scheduling queue, and for some people that meant months, even years, of delay! That's how messed up the system is. 


So, I will not try to reschedule. I am still debating if I should get a hotel room and just go the night before, or leave super early, like 5.30 am, to avoid rush hour traffic delays. I've read about experience of someone going to that same office from Austin, and after getting lost, arriving 15 minutes late to the appointment and not being allowed to have the interview that day but having to reschedule. And they don't give out any phone number I could call from the road to let them know if I am a little late. And so, like so many people on different forums have said, it will be best to make it to this interview on time, and then hopefully have only one more appointment (for the oath ceremony) with this agency and then be done and over with it for good!

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Citizenship: Interview Scheduled

Just saw this updated information uscis.gov for my naturalization application.

Testing and Interview

Your N400, APPLICATION FOR NATURALIZATION is now scheduled for interview. You will receive a written notice with a time and place for your interview. You should receive this notice within 14 days. If you do not receive this notice within 14 days from June 1, 2012, please call customer service...

Since today is Sunday, I assume it posted yesterday (although I think I checked and it wasn't there), because it wasn't there on Friday. Their site it doesn't say how much time they give us between the written notice and the interview date, but if it's anything like the biometrics scheduling, it should be within a month. So, I am guessing I should be done with the interview by mid July.

Maybe my friend was right in guessing my oath ceremony would be before September.

Snake #3

I had another crawling thing at mi casa. Same size as the last time. I guess I should be grateful we get to eliminate them when they are little, and didn't have another giant like the first one.

But this is getting old.

I was running late for church when I saw it, so no pictures this time. I had my brother take care of it. This one also had its head stuck in the glue mouse trap box (I am glad I got few extra ones to keep replacing them), and it was moving its body together with the box. We couldn't drop a live snake at the park trash can, so my brother took a shovel and banged on top of the box a few times really well. It was dead for sure. We left it in a plastic bag out in the sun and heat for the afternoon and then threw it into our trash can.

Maybe I really should start looking for that snake-a-way thing the pest control guy recommended.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Citizenship: In Line for Interview

I have moved one step further in the Citizenship process.
This appeared today on the uscis website under my receipt number:

Testing and Interview

On May 31, 2012, your N400, APPLICATION FOR NATURALIZATION was placed in line for interview scheduling. When scheduling is complete, you will receive a written notice with a time and place for your interview. Please check the website for further updates on your case. 


The page then goes on to explain that the amount of time the application will remain in this step is determined by the number of cases ahead of mine. I better start looking over the Civics test again!

Woohoo!

Saturday, May 26, 2012

A Sweet Song

A red cardinal bird came today on Ciro's grave. If you look closely on this image, you can see his beak is opened, as if he is singing. 


These birds make a particular chirp sound, that Ciro learned to imitate, so it was particularly moving that he was chirping right there. 

The X Factor

I had so much fun the other night at the live audience taping of the X Factor talent show. Now, I am not a big follower of this show, to be clear. I don't even know which tv network it is on nor when, and I also wasn't sure if they had more than singing on that show. I just know it's a talent show, one of several of that kind, with judges, one of whom is Simon Cowell. And I enjoy watching on those kind of shows some really good talent, and some people who come there obviously having no talent. So, when my friend Julie said she had an extra ticket, I excitedly decided to join her!

It was at the Frank Erwin Center, a huge place that fit 4329 of us in the audience. And this was just one of the four audition tapings in Austin. We parked downtown near my friend's work place, and took a cab. It turned out great because the line was already all the way around the building 45 min before the "arrival time" on the ticket. We actually only had "line vouchers", as everyone else in the line, which were just that, vouchers that allowed us to stand in line to get the real ticket. It was a bit hot that afternoon on the concrete with no shade, but I was just too excited to bother. It was just something out of the ordinary to experience, I was with a dear friend, we might be on tv for a second, I was going to see some celebrities, and hear some interesting performers. What's not to like!

The tapping actually started an hour after the time on the ticket, after everyone was seated and we, the audience, heard some "rules of conduct", welcomed the judges, and had some opportunity to take photos. Even thought the ticket said it will last 5 hours, which we really hoped was not true, the auditions lasted just over 2.5 hours. And the contestants didn't disappoint. The first one, a single mom, was probably the best, and has really set the bar high. It was hard for me to boo in the beginning, especially at the so-so ones, but there were few that were just so bad I had to close my ears. I am sure those will get special air time when the show airs.

We took a pedi-cab ride back to our cars, and it was another new, fun experience for me. All in all, it was a fun experience. Here are some photos.



Oh, and just one more thing. Julie and I were wondering out loud who got to sit in the front rows behind the judges, as those people will be on tv for sure. We actually laughed when 7-8 blonds paraded to the front row, and all set next to each other. They later separated them, to had a more mixed audience appearance, and alternated sleeveless with sleeved dresses. The lady next to us then said here daughter was there, and she was picked out of the line to go sit there. So, they actually picked "pretty people" out of the line to be on tv. Just so you know! :)

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Introducing: Pricho


I am still not completely set on the name, so Pricho is his "working title" for now. :) Ficho-Pricho is one of the nicknames.

He is a Fischer's Lovebird, whereas Ciro was a Peachfaced Lovebird. I got him, somewhat unexpectedly, exactly 2 months ago, on St. Patrick's day. He was wearing his green for that day! :) He is 4 months old now.

I knew I wanted to get another bird after Ciro's passing. And I knew I wanted a lovebird. I was thinking of slightly different color, maybe more yellow than green, just so that it doesn't look too much like Ciro. And I wanted a male. Well, after few weeks of search in Austin, I discovered that Lovebirds are really hard to find here. Big stores, like Petco, Petsmart, and Thomilson's, do not offer Lovebirds any more because of some disease that is very common among them and is very contagious to other birds. Smaller stores also didn't have them, and I couldn't find any breeders in Austin that have them. I got in touch with several little pet stores I've never heard of before, bird rescue centers and such, but aside from budgies and cockatiels, they all deal with much bigger birds. I posted adds and requests on different sites, and the best I got was to wait until summer when the mating season is in full swing. I only found one place, Gallery of pets, who happened to get 3 chicks from someone with an abusive hen, and because the store was now handfeeding them, they jacked up the price to 4 times more than breeders in other cities! Not cool. Plus, those little ones were all green, like Ciro, and I wanted some yellowish.

I was willing to wait few months. In the meantime, I researched cages, as I knew I wanted to get a bigger one, and Ciro's cage was no longer in best shape. It was almost as hard picking out the cage as it was picking out my new car! :) Many bigger cages have thicker and more spaced out bars, which are not suitable for small birds. And I had a list of other requirements: both large and smaller doors, rounded top, removable grate, both vertical and horizontal bars,... I am very happy with the one I ended up getting.


Before actually purchasing this cage, I decided to check out a bird fair that was coming up in Temple. I've never been to a bird fair, but I read that they usually have birds, cages, toys, food all for usually much lover prices. I went hoping to maybe find this cage there, get some toy making supplies, and if I was really lucky, find the yellowish lovebird. I brought the small cage with me, for just in case. The whole experience was quite overwhelming. There were not that many exhibitors as I expected, so not that many birds, no cages similar to what I was looking for, no toy supplies, and no yellowish lovebirds. The lovebirds that were there were four blue masked (4 months), one all yellow lutino (1 year), and four Fischer's (8-10 weeks).



So, since I knew I wanted a young bird, so I can tame him quicker, only Fischer's were an option. I circled around, talked with my brother and mom over skype, touched to try to figure out which ones are male, asked around if anyone knew of Peachfaced breeders, and circled some more. The lutino happened to be owned by a lady I knew from St. Edward's choir, but it was too old for me, not the right color, and just not in the best shape. Finally, after about three hours of decision making, I decided to get one (out of two left by that point) Fischer's! The breeder, Stacey from south of San Antonio told me that she actually gets many of her birds from a breeder even further south, and that he has many peachfaced lovebirds, so I was torn weather I should wait or not. But I am happy with the decision I made. I got me (what Stacey thought out of those four, was) an 8 week old baby lovebird (2nd from the left on that picture above).

Day 5: standing on my hand and eating outside of the cage
He (I got him DNA tested two weeks later, so I know for sure I have a boy :)), has been really sweet! And such a quick learner. The first evening he was already eating millet spray as I held it inside his cage, the next day he ate if from my palm, and third day he was already willing to step up! I had the breeder clip his wings, so we don't run into a similar situation like with Ciro flying into a glass door on the 3rd day I had him, but I will not clip again once his new feathers come out later this year. Since he can fly only short distance now, and was young enough not to yet be too afraid of people, has been warming up rather quickly.

Now, after two months, he can step up from outside of the cage, fly to me for a treat, comes to my shoulder for a ride, lets me scratch his head (which is huge), give him kisses and pick him up in my hand (another big one!). He loves playing with (many) toys in his cage, enjoys shredding cardboard and wood toys I give him, is very talkative, and smart figuring out his foraging toys. I built him a tree stand, so he enjoys hoping on there, but still rather stays near the cage. I assume that will change when he gets more confident with flying. Right now he often lands on the floor, and I have to pick him up (good thing he wants to step up), so I think he feels a bit unsure when he gets too far from the cage.


The fact that I got him so young makes a huge difference. He just learned to fly and eat on his own a week or so before, so even though he was not hand-fed, he didn't yet have time to get afraid of hands and humans. It was much easier to build the trust bond with him than with Ciro, whom I got when he was 3 months old, and been sitting in the store for a month. He was wild! With Ciro it took me two months to just be able to put my hand inside the cage without him going all nuts. This little one lets me hold him already. Such a cute, smart little bird! I see a great future ahead of us. :)

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

5-Things Wednesday: The Road to Citizenship

This year I am FINALLY applying to become a US citizen. I has been a long, long process. After 14 years in this country, this year, God willing, I'll finally become a citizen. And that is actually not as long as people from some other countries had to endure. So, I am grateful that I see the light at the end of the tunnel.

1. The first step, that really is the one that can take decades, is to get a green card. You cannot start thinking about naturalization until you've become a permanent resident. I remember when I was getting ready to first move to the US, one colleague of mine what are the way to get the green card. She told me there are three: a) come as a refugee (which for me was no longer an option because the war in Bosnia was over), b) marry a US citizen (sure, I wouldn't mind!), c) through employment. The last one was my avenue. So, after 2.5 year of school, one year on temporary work visa, I first got a "permanent" work visa in 2002. Five year later, in 2007 I became a permanent resident and got a green card. Five years later, this April, I became eligible to apply for citizenship!

2. Unlike for the permanent residency, my employer doesn't cover any part of the cost of the citizenship application. To go through our attorneys would have cost me twice as much and required three times as many documents as if I applied myself. So, on April 13th I sent in my application, 2 photos, and $680 directly to USCIS. After them acknowledging the acceptance, I am now in the Initial Review part of that process. They had me come to a local office in North Austin for fingerprinting on May 9th. They also took my photo there, that will probably be the one used on the citizenship certificate.

3. Once I am cleared by the FBI (I don't actually knows how they check the fingerprints), they'll schedule me for Testing and Interview. At that fingerprinting appointment I received a booklet to prepare for the civics testing. There are 100 questions about US history and government, and I need to get 6 out of 10 right to pass the test. The other part of the interview is just some basic English test. The testing is probably going to be in San Antonio, and they'll schedule me based on how many application they currently have.

4. Then I wait to receive the formal Decision in the mail. I don't really know how long it takes them to make a decision after the interview.

5. But even after being approved, I don't become a citizen until the official Oath Ceremony. From what I've heard, the entire process from sending in the papers to the ceremony is about 5 months, so I hope this to be some time in September. I was actually hoping it to be a month later because my mom would be here and she would like to come with me. I think it's at least a half day affair, but most of it is just sitting and waiting for the ceremony to start.

After the oath, I should get the certificate in the mail. It will be very official!

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

5-Things Wednesday: Rocks, Dirt, and More Rocks

This project was on my to-do list for a long time. I have this 2ft wide path with pebbles next to the walkway between the garage and the entrance door. Over the last 6 years, it was getting more and more difficult to keep it orderly because there was no weed barrier underneath. The only way to pull the weeds out with the root was to use a little shovel to get under the pebbles. Every time I did that, more dirt was coming to the surface, and more rocks were getting buried into the dirt. At the end of last year, with other things on my mind, I completely gave up on removing the weeds from the path, and it was not pretty. I don't have close up pictures of how bad it looked, for obvious reasons, and this one was from last spring. The pebbles are to the right of the concrete path in front of the door.


The guys from Green 'n Growing, who planted the tree in the front, suggested it would cost about $200 to get new rocks in there. I didn't like that idea, of paying for something I thought I could do myself, so I finally started this project without much before-thought. 

Here is the project in five steps:
1. Just start it! I didn't really have a plan, and it was delaying this project from happening. I imagined it would not be a one-day endeavor, but I was confident I can fix it. I knew I wanted to save the rocks that were there, not have to buy new ones, which meant all the buried rocks have to come out. How exactly - I didn't know. So, one day I just started scooping pebbles from one corner.

2. After few scoops, I realized it's going to take quite some time. Even the surface rocks were mixed with a lot of dry leaves, mulch that was washed off from the flower bed, and weeds. I soon had to pick each pebble individually. One. By. One. Yeah, that first day, after couple of hours, I removed only about foot length of rocks. 
The surface rocks were fairly clean, but I still had to rinse them in the yard clippings buckets that had holes on the bottom. All the clean rocks I stored in an old recycling bucket, and it turned out that was just about how many rocks I had. 

3. Once I removed the surface rocks, I used a small rake to dig the pebbles from the dirt. This was a looong process! The ground was soft enough after recent rains, but that also meant the rocks were covered in muddy dirt. So, those needed extra rinsing. At first I thought it would make sense if they're rinsed over the rocks that have not been picked up yet, instead of throwing that washed off dirt and small pebbles that fall through the holes, elsewhere. But that only made the mud worse.  Those other rocks were much harder to dig out from the extra layer of mud.
I didn't take pictures during the process of taking the rocks out, but it was a mess. A Mess. It took me and mom, who helped immensely, about a month to pick out and clean all the rocks. I would dig them out over the weekend or some evenings, and then she would rinse and rinse them during the week. We tried different methods; several buckets, oven grease pen with holes, and finally me rinsing batches of pebbles in a pan. 
What a site for our eyes when all the pebbles were removed, and I finally rinsed the last one! Just looking at this dry, rock-free area brings peace after weeks of muddy mess.


4. The next two steps were a breeze. I first got some extra dirt to raise the ground level so to rocks would be closer to the concrete level. Since all the rocks I dug out filled up the recycling bucket, plus just a little bit extra, I calculated the volume of the bucket and the volume of the area where the rocks need to go. Based on that, I figured out how deep the area needs to be to house the amount of rocks I had. I know, I am the geeky engineer. :) Then I cut the weed barrier underlayment, and placed two layers.


5. And finally, the clean rocks went back in. The completed project: