So - quick news update. We ARE getting a puppy after all!
Isn't he a cutie pie? Well, we're spending the next few days re-puppy proofing the house- having all but given up on puppies until next spring. We put carpets back down and took out gates and stored the toys away...

Mum found these great gasket lidded, ant proof food bins- the upright one holding up to 50lbs. The best part is they require thumbs to open, so while the dog food will be in a room near the puppy, the puppy will not be able to access the goodies. Same goes for the smaller pig ear/chew food box. Thinning out the gloves and heavy socks and the tons and tons of extra plastic bags freed up a basket and a few canvas bags for toys, leash, collar, and wee-pads.
Easy to access- for us! but still well out of reach of critters.
But what to do with all the tool miscellany that puppy products replaced?
I don't have any before photos for you, so you'll have to just believe me, but there were two boxes full of tools and odds and ends and three partially completed tool boxes. Having tools spread between the house, the garage, and the barn has been crazy and frustrating - so going through this closet is only the first step on a property wide tool round up. Some of them have been left out in the elements (victims of fence building in the rain) and require some cleaning, sanitizing and others have just wandered so far from their original locations that their purpose is also obscured.
I pulled everything out of the boxes, one piece at a time, and separated them by type and use. Are they for inside the house projects? Like toilet/shower repair? Like light switch plate replacement covers? Or are they for long term projects, or seasonal ones, where they could be better served living in the garage or barn?
Here you can see some of the oddities (8 alan wrenches- some pictured here, end of a plunger, squeegie, and ... necklace clasps?) I separated as I went through the boxes. I decided to bag each thing individually by type (nuts, bolts, washers, screws, hanging materials, etc) and label them with a sharpie. Organizing, I was able eliminate one box entirely. All of those things are better suited elsewhere (soldering kit, useful but probably shouldn't live in the kitchen). The top drawer has quick access things like the aforementioned nuts and bolts and screws and nails, as well as masks (safety first!) and tape, white grease, mysterious yellow plastic triangles (they remind me of the cones used in pottery but you know, plastic. I'll have to inquire after the sailor for explanation), and gloves. The idea is to keep all the little bits from getting everywhere so we here at home can fix things while the sailor is sailing and yet, when the sailor comes to shore he can get (and rearrange) at will.
Voce was overseeing the efficiency of this project.
The inside doesn't look terribly organized, but everything is bagged and labeled so a quick rummage will allow anyone to find a project (curtain rods for the sewing room par exemple) with ease. Things in here are quick fixes (under-carpet fabric to keep carpets from slipping/curling etc) or project materials, things we will need access to but not necessarily all the time.
I think there's enough room for this guy to live in the front closet, but an alternative is finding somewhere in the laundry/mudroom or just outside that door in the garage. The idea is immediate access and knowing where things are- mise en place.
Next stop tools! We consolidated the three mostly full toolboxes into one, leaving that one, a box cutter, and measuring tape within immediate reach above the rain jackets and vacuum. But the other two are joining the migration to the barn- where they'll be gone through and organized properly.
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