12.12.2008

Attack of the Christmas Decorations

This year, I was a super-decorating-slacker. Tradition dictates that decorations go up the weekend after Thanksgiving, right? Well, at that point, I felt like the house was a mess and decorations would just add to the chaos. They didn't even get pulled out of the shed, where they were being stored in boxes.

A week later, we go out to the shed to get the decorations, and the lock is frozen closed, with the key in it. Awesome. No decorations were pulled out last weekend, either.

This week the house was clean and I was determined to get the tree up. I wasn't really feeling the seasonal spirit, and I thought it would help. The constantly-on radio was turned from NPR to a station playing Christmas music, and the Christmas season started creeping into our house. Finally, Thursday, the boxes with the tree & ornaments got pulled into the house.

I was finishing up getting dinner ready, Josh pulled the tree out of the cardboard box and proceeded to try to get it settled in to stand. After getting the base set, he turned around to get the next tree piece and exclaimed,
"There are ants* all over the floor! They were in the tree."
I come over to look. "They could have been going after some food, they may not have been in the tree. Are they dead?"
"No, some of them are moving. Quick, get me something to smash them with!"
Um, I don't want all these ants' guts on my floor. "I'll get the broom & sweep them up."
"You can't put them in the trash!"
"I'll throw them outside."
I sweep them up, totally grossed out, before dinner. Josh grabs the second section of the tree, and tons more ants fall out.
"Ack! They are in the tree!" I say. I proceed to swat at the tree until half-dead ants stop falling out, then sweep them up & throw them onto our porch.

GROSS GROSS GROSS

Sigh, well, that's done. We open the Rubbermaid container containing my prized Willow Tree Nativity Scene. The set is ant-free. The last cardboard box of ornaments, though, was even worse than the tree. Most of the basic ornaments were salvaged, but the star tree topper (which seemed to be Home Base for the colony) and other ornaments were thrown out along with all the cardboard boxes.

GROSS GROSS GROSS

Lesson learned: We went out & bought Rubbermaid containers for ALL the ornaments & the tree last night. If we're going to store these outside, cardboard won't cut it.

* These were BIG black ants. I'm really glad they were sleeping/hibernating/cold/slow because if they were going full-ant-speed-ahead, my house would be overrun, and I would have freaked out.

** Through all of this, Casey wasn't interested in chasing any of the bugs, unlike earlier.

4 comments:

Alisse Goldsmith said...

oh my gosh! that sounds so bad! i would have completely freaked - ask matt about my aversion to anything that crawls sometime. you handled it well - i would NOT have swept them up; i would have found a hotel and called an exterminator.

Joanna said...

Alisse- It's what we get for storing the not-waterproof-or-airtight boxes outside, I guess. And, you should change the name you comment with to something more up-to-date ;-)

Matt Moberly said...

Our Christmas tree is still stored in the cardboard box it came in, out in our garage. A hole about 3" in diameter got punched in the box by a tool or something a couple years ago, and every time we get the box out I have an irrational fear that a family of rats has moved in to it.

So far I've been wrong every year and the box has been rat-free, but doesn't that just mean the probability of it happening next year is even higher?!?

Alisse Goldsmith said...

The name is semi-up-to-date. I just hyphenated, but I didn't change my gmail account yet, so it automatically says I'm Goldsmith :)

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