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Laying bricks

Monday, July 16th, 2012

We began building the first adobe wall today. As with most things, we “practiced” in an inconspicuous place. This time it was the back laundry room. (The adobe there will help warm our bedroom in the winter.)

First, we mixed the mud. It’s pretty much like stucco, except we added some color to try to make the mortar look less gray and more like the adobe bricks.

The actual bricklaying went faster than I expected. Brad said these bricks are much more stable and solid than others he’s worked with.

Here is the first day’s work. And things always go faster after the first day.

And on the weather front, we’ve gotten an inch of rain in the past 24 hours. We also had pretty big hail this afternoon. Exciting.

What is this?!?

Saturday, March 10th, 2012

I’ve been gone for most of this week for work. On Friday, we hit the stucco hard again though. It was cold and windy.

Then this morning, we woke up to this.

Seriously?!? Snow?!? I thought it was spring.

Tomorrow it’s supposed to be back up to 70. We hope it is.

 

What’s that smell?

Friday, December 9th, 2011

At about 3:30 this morning, I awoke groggily to a faintly nutty smell. I jumped out of bed shrieking, remembering that I’d left a pan of beans on the stove all night. Oops. Poor Brad must have thought it was something much worse. At any rate, it didn’t turn out too bad. There was no water left in the pan, but only the bottom layer of beans were a bit brown. They hadn’t burned, nor was the pan ruined. Apparently, I woke up just in time.

It’s been very cold here this week. In the 20s or lower at night and cool during the days as well. For visitors coming in December or January, bring something warm!

This week I finally harvested the last of the tomatoes and pulled out the old plants. Even in the greenhouse, this cold was just too much for them. We still have greens (lettuce, tatsoi, spinach) growing though.

The seed catalog for spring just arrived, so it must be time to start planning next spring’s crops. Hmmm….

Dramatic weather

Friday, November 25th, 2011

We had a lovely Thanksgiving yesterday. Just as guests were arriving for dinner, the thunder, lightning, and rain started! Here is the result of a long night of steady rain.

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This morning, while Brad was writing, I went out and had a nice long walk around the property. Here are some pictures.

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A River Runs Through It

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Yesterday, we got our first really big rain.

I was driving across NM in the afternoon and saw hail, torrential rain, and line after line of thunderstorms, punctuated occasionally by rainbows. By the time, I turned south off I-10, I felt like I was a part of Stormchasers crew heading into the eye of the storm.

It was the first time there was enough water that we didn’t think it was safe to drive the Mini down Sunrise, so I left it at the gate on 80.

While I was waiting for Brad to pick me up in the truck, I heard the oddest chorus of crying frogs. It sounded like I was deep in the rainforest. (And where are all these frogs when there is no rain?)

I got up this morning to go take a picture of the river running through the bottom of our driveway, but by then it was gone. It is amazing how fast the land here soaks up so much water.

Four walls

Monday, July 11th, 2011

Monsoon season has officially arrived, though we haven’t gotten more than a couple very brief showers, not really enough to even soak the ground, but still promising. The good news is that the evenings have finally started cooling off. Yesterday, we had a remarkable 40 degree span in temperatures (about 110 in the afternoon and then in the 60s in the evening). This makes for much better sleeping; nights in the 90s weren’t doing much for me. We’ve also had some lovely evening shows of thunder and lightning. Disturbing to the cows, but beautiful to us.

This week we’ve been working hard and now have all our exterior walls framed — including the very high ones, which we weren’t sure we could put up by ourselves.

We did.

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The process went something like this. Brad stood on the ground and heaved the wall up. (For one particularly wide section, we both heaved from the ground and propped the wall up on ladders.)

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Then I stood on the scaffolding with a rope and pulled with all my might while Brad pushed the wall the rest of the way up. (For that particularly wide wall, we used two ropes.) The scaffolding was actually tied off to the truck so that it didn’t tip forward.

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Initially, we didn’t put in all the window framing and headers in order to keep the weight as light as possible. Then we added them in place later.

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Before extra framing

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And the same wall segment after

Overall, it wasn’t as hard as we thought it would be. Most things aren’t.

A chance of rain

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

It’s hard to believe that it’s almost the beginning of July, but here we are. I’ve been traveling a lot this month, which has meant not a lot of big work on the house, but I’m now home for a long stretch. With some big work projects completed, we are now full steam ahead on the house.

After two months, the fires are now finally safely far from us, though our thoughts are with those who are now affected by them. The firefighters’ camp has moved north. It was strange to see them all cleared out in just 24 hours.

Just as the fire updates stopped coming, we began getting warnings of impending flooding. It’s a little  hard to think about that since we haven’t had rain since last year, but the big monsoons are due any day now. In fact, I am writing this on a plane going back home and heard from Brad yesterday that we got our first sprinkle of rain. (I was in Philadelphia, and it rained there, as it often does. I had an overwhelming urge to run into the middle of the street and dance in the rain.)

The weather has been extraordinarily hot at home, hotter than it ever got last year. It has been between 105 and 110, and even the evenings have not been as pleasantly cool as they usually are.

The garden is thriving in the heat, except for the eggplants. The more I read about them, the more I think they don’t thrive in any conditions we are likely to have; they seem to be very sensitive to heat, cold, wind, and other variations. Ours are doing ok, but not exactly thriving. The tomatoes, on the other hand, are going crazy. At last count, there were over 50 fruits. I think we will be canning sauce and salsa soon. Brad has put in another bed for more garlic, and I look forward to having an even bigger and better garden every year.

The deer around the house each evening are getting more numerous and less shy, especially as it is so hot and dry, and we have water for them. Brad has won the latest round of battles with the bees in the front tree, but the war remains in question. (Any suggestions on getting bees out of a tree are welcome.) We have not seen even one rattlesnake this year. In fact, my only snake sighting was a very small garter snake that was nearly on top of my shoe one morning we went walking. Both the snake and I were quite startled by each other.

When the first rain comes, we will anxiously scout about for all the wildlife that seems to appear at that prompting. velvet mites, our lovely turtles, frogs, and whatever else might spring from the ground. It’s an exciting time that first rain!

Changing seasons?

Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010

It seems time for one of those newsy updates about life here.

We awoke this morning to a cool steady rain. It was the kind that really soaked the ground, much better for the plants  than the storms that whip through here, though less entertaining for us. The rain gauge this morning held a little over 1/4″ (three-tenths as they would say here), and there are still low clouds holding rain all around us.

Yesterday, huge thunderclouds loomed all around us, and by sunset, there were huge downpours falling to the north and south of us, but only a few drops here. So it was nice to wake up to the sound of a steady rain.

Other than that, the weather has still been hot during the day (90s), but it has been getting very cool at night (high 50s). Fall seems to be in the air. (At the farm, we are harvesting pumpkins and winter squash, more signs of changing seasons.)

We haven’t quite started the second house yet, but have been working on some changes to the plans. Now that we’ve lived here for a while, we have a better feel for things. In particular, while we’d been warned that we probably designed with too many windows, we are adding even more windows to the second house. The summer heat hasn’t been too bad (especially with the ceiling fan and shades), and we love the views more than we ever thought we would.

We are also getting new quotes on materials. We’ve heard that prices have gone up considerably in the last few months. I can’t imagine why — has there been a resurgence in the building economy that I’ve missed? At any rate, we should start ordering and then building soon. (By the way, what do you all think of “Gila” — pronounced heel-uh — as a name for the second house? I’m not sure it means anything by itself but there are many things named for it, including a river, mountains, a county, a fish, and obviously a monster lizard sometimes seen in these parts.)

In the meantime, we’ve had time to finish up some detail work in Tumbleweed that we hadn’t gotten to previously. Not that there won’t always be more to do, but things are very livable and mostly finished looking now.

Our garden, though late in coming to its prime, is producing a lot now. We’ve had tons of green onions and cucumbers, and yesterday I counted 12 green tomatoes of varying sizes. (We’ve harvested four so far.) We’ve also had a good amount of green beans. I’m currently planting a fall crop of spinach and lettuce, and we are also planting garlic and Egyptian walking onions. I feel like I’ve learned enough this year that we’ll really have a good garden next year.

Weather or not

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

Amazing. We found the rain gauge that we thought we’d gotten rid of in the move. When we won this in a bar contest years ago (in Florida), we never thought we’d find it useful. And the rain for yesterday came in at about 1-1/4″.

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Green is a lovely color

Monday, August 9th, 2010

The monsoons continue here, and things are really greening up. Every day that it rains, we hope it is not the end. It is beautiful and looks so different from how the land looked just a month or so ago.

Back across the septic field...bare dirt just a few months ago!

toward the Peloncillos

toward the Peloncillos

Toward our front gate and the Chiricahuas

Other miscellanea for this week…. We have eaten some unusual, truly native food. First, we ate some seeds from  acorns. They were really good, something between a pine nut and a pumpkin seed. I’m thinking of making pesto from some of them. (We have far too many to plant them all.) We also harvested some prickly pears and made lemonade and cocktails from them. For those unfamiliar, prickly pears are the dark red fruits that grow atop a certain type of cactus. We have lots here. They are not only exquisitely colored but delicious.

We had a very nice hike down “our” Horseshoe Canyon Friday.

The garden is doing great. The cucumbers finally have fruit. We have one tomato ready to harvest and several more on the way. We’ve been eating beans and green onions, and they are delicious. The eggplants look very healthy, but no blooms yet.  I’ve transplanted a few watermelon plants outside. They are very spindly and small, but we’ll see.

(Also for anyone interested, here is a post I did for the farm this week on freezing food that has some good tips in it. This week, I’ve been doing a lot of cooking and freezing for the farm. I am officially sick of zucchini! I know we’ll all enjoy it in the winter though.)

Wildlife sightings this week include our bobcat (who we haven’t seen for a couple weeks), a horned lizard, a few desert turtles, and lots and lots of bats in the evenings. They must love all the bugs that are around right now.

On the house, I’ve been working on the bathroom door. Brad’s been doing several miscellaneous catch-up projects while we wait for the consultation on framing for the next house so we can begin on that. I am hoping to get the much-requested  “walk-through” video of the house done this week.

And my big project for work is done! Yay!