The Old Folks Home

The weather is REALLY nice here (daytimes in the 60's, so warmer than usual; nighttimes in the low 30's), so it's doing yardwork after it hits 45-ish. Lots of pruning needs attending to. Just at home stuff and no expeditions. Next week, however, it's multiple trips back up to Santa Fe for inspections on a new prospect property.

The first property we made an offer on imploded magnificently under all the inspection defects. First was the banned-material roof which would've needed immediate repairs/replacing, then the discovery -- faucent spewed rust -- of galvanized pipe plumbing (the unit was only 20 years old, so why the galvanized which hasn't really been used since the 1960's and why was it corroded...more on this later), high radon levels, dishwasher line tied to toilet line with no air gap (so a disaster for the dishwasher if sewer ever backed up), a more-than-compromised sewer line (necessitating complete replacement to the street hookup in the Spring), and problematic drainage and a retaining wall that was failing rapidly. Talking to the uphill neighbor whose tree was facilitating the wall failure and landscaping was causing some runoff issues, she told me that the area the unit I was contemplating used to be the adjoining house's chicken coop! (Figures, eh?) So the reason for the galvanized, we deduced, was they built the plumbing off the 1920's garden spigot. Anyway, glad to be out of that contract as all the remediations were estimated to be about $120-160K or so.

Looking around at other various properties in that area in my price range (I refuse to spend more on a vacation place than on the main home), most were old and decrepit OR had serious functionality problems. (A kitchen with no oven or dishwasher? Yeah, basically a counter with a sink against a wall.) I was beginning to think that Santa Fe was a vastly over-hyped pit or that maybe in "The City Different" folks were tainted by the water into delusional thinking. So looked in other neighborhoods farther away from the Plaza and in the next burrough over where the yards are bigger and the homes more spacious I made an offer on this particular domicile the day it came on the market....and so did five other people. (The real estate market is really hot right now in Santa Fe and this place was well-maintained and beautifully appointed.) DH hasn't seen the place yet, so his first glimpse will be on Monday when we go up for the main inspection. Fingers crossed this one's a keeper...
:fl

Meanwhile, back on the farm....
My hatchlings are teen birds now and a couple of the pullets are starting to grow larger wattles and they're definitely pinkening up. Hope to have eggs soon and there will be the surprise to see just what colors are laid among the F2 Cuckoo Bluebars and the Marans. The rooster is still rather timid about his crowing ability, which suits all in near proximity just fine.

I'm taking a 3-month-long vegetarian chef's course sponsored by the "Forks over Knives" group. Hoping to reduce blood sugar levels and get my weight back down. Dairy and sugar are the hardest things for me to give up. However, I tweaked my morning half-and-half and creamer into goats milk and managed to lose 20 lbs without changing my diet too much. (Guess I was drinking a lot of the heavy cream and flavor stuff!) We're not totally vegan here, though, as we still have one or two meals a week with meat in them. (baby steps) Looking forward to Spring and planting all sorts of new veggies in the beds. A nice benefit of these lessons is that my knife skills have vastly improved. DH is warily impressed.
I need to do something to shed some weight. It is tiresome toting 50# of excess blubber around. I drink 2% milk in my tea so that's not high calorie. My big downfall is sugar and carbs. Thinking i will lose some weight stringing fences. Lost 20 lbs like that in TN.
 
(we have more outdoors that could be brought in but I've never ever run out of the indoor wood in the 11 years I've been here)
I try to keep that from happening by restocking on "nice" days every few weeks from the little barn where the bulk of the wood lives. I can get about 1.5 cords on the enclosed porch. Can't quite imagine starting the winter with 4 cords IN the house! And I sure wouldn't want to trust the porch to hold up ~8,000 pounds of anything.
 
Enjoy your prune cake Ron. :drool

Peep good luck on the new house! :fl

Cap I find it hard to believe with all you do all the time that you have to fight the bulge. :D

I have just cut back on my coffee intake and the size of my meals and lost 16 lbs so far.
I still eat and snack on what ever I want. Except fried foods.
But I have been doing a little exercise a couple times a day for 5 minutes.
 
Enjoy your prune cake Ron. :drool

Peep good luck on the new house! :fl

Cap I find it hard to believe with all you do all the time that you have to fight the bulge. :D

I have just cut back on my coffee intake and the size of my meals and lost 16 lbs so far.
I still eat and snack on what ever I want. Except fried foods.
But I have been doing a little exercise a couple times a day for 5 minutes.
Once i had my hysterectomy it really started packing on. That and being inside all winter. Planning to do some walking once it warms up. Plus i plan to build a greenhouse and a retaining wall this summer, maybe even a turkey coop...string fencing for the goats, build pens and hayloft in goat shed. And adding a whole lot of veggies to my diet.
 
Enjoy your prune cake Ron. :drool

Peep good luck on the new house! :fl

Cap I find it hard to believe with all you do all the time that you have to fight the bulge. :D

I have just cut back on my coffee intake and the size of my meals and lost 16 lbs so far.
I still eat and snack on what ever I want. Except fried foods.
But I have been doing a little exercise a couple times a day for 5 minutes.
The cake is in the oven!

Good job one the live style changes you have made. It makes a big difference to make little changes

:thumbsup
 
Once i had my hysterectomy it really started packing on. That and being inside all winter. Planning to do some walking once it warms up. Plus i plan to build a greenhouse and a retaining wall this summer, maybe even a turkey coop...string fencing for the goats, build pens and hayloft in goat shed. And adding a whole lot of veggies to my diet.
Good plan!
 
We left the dog along in the house, uncrated, for the first time today while we ran out to get a few bags of pellets to tide us over and some groceries. I wasn't sure what to expect when we got back but I did know what I didn't want to see: stuff destroyed and excrement on the floor.
Dog was asleep on her bed, house looked exactly like we left it.
:ya

I try to keep that from happening by restocking on "nice" days every few weeks from the little barn where the bulk of the wood lives. I can get about 1.5 cords on the enclosed porch. Can't quite imagine starting the winter with 4 cords IN the house! And I sure wouldn't want to trust the porch to hold up ~8,000 pounds of anything.

I honestly can't believe we're this close to being out of wood. There's maybe 20 pieces left, best case scenario. We bring it into the basement, which is concrete on earth, so I'm not terribly worried about the weight. The outside wood is old enough to burn but it was supposed to be for next year's winter, it's a couple cords worth. I like to let mine season for 2 years because our summers are so short around here and we don't get much sun, it can take that long. I'll just have to buy extra this spring. I don't like to cut it this close (by this close I mean for cutting into winter 2018 stores).
 

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