31 December 2012

1000 Tejas Nuevas


Domingo 23 - Sábado 29 Diciembre 2012.  (Dom 23rd) Dan thought this would finally be a morning when we could stay in bed late and study spanish. After 15 minutes, Carmen insisted she needed to start the laundry, since it was going to be sunny today. We went to the Fogon & Paila restaurant for a late breakfast. This is but a five block walk from home. We have had many good breakfasts there, however, today the crew seemed all new. Carmen was served ham mixed with her scrambled eggs instead of the requested chorizo and for the first time, they were swimming in oil. Dan's Huevos Rancheros breakfast was excellent. We very much enjoy the beauty of the surroundings of this restaurant.

Carmen spent the rest of the day climbing ladders and scraping, cleaning & painting the outsides of the window woodwork. Dan also climbed ladders and took the waste chute down from the front porch roof and festermicide-treated and sealed the window trim pieces to replace those which were termite chewed. When the paint was dry on them he went up on the roof and nailed them into place. Wonder why people need to use exercising gyms-----------

(Lun 24th) We left home at 7:30am to get Carmen to the IMSS hospital where she had an appointment with an internist. After waiting half an hour, a receptionist came and told us that the doctor would not be in today (it is the day before Christmas, after all) and we needed to go to another office to get rescheduled. A nurse rescheduled her for Jan 3rd. Will the doctor decide to come in to work that day? Maybe he was ill, but it our bet that he wanted an extra holiday.

Knowing that we were going to walk on north the few blocks into the main downtown area of Cordoba after the doctor appointment, we had parked our car towards town. Dan ordered a printer at Ofix, and we were low on a certain type of oatmeal cookies that we buy at Waldos dollar store, so on to there. Ania had told us about El Borrego store that carried the best ham in the area. Since we walked but a half block from there, we made a slight detour thru that store. Oh my, what a fantastic smell! There was a really long line of people waiting to buy their Xmas ham, and several meat cutters prepping and sawing whole and half hams. I suppose we would have become part of that line, had we not already purchased a ham at the supermarket.

Next stop – we drove on to Home Depot. Here we purchased a few building supplies, plus a new level for our foreman and tape measures for the other three employees for Xmas gifts. Got home in time to present gifts to crew during their lunch, which they take on our front porch at our little table that used to sit under our apple tree in Anacortes.

We also made a stop at Office Depot, where Dan purchased a calendar. We had almost given up hope of finding one down here. We have discovered that this calendar is formated in Mexican style with monday the first day of the week. We will be confused with this for awhile.

Carmen finished her day with vacuuming the whole house. Though all floors are tile, the vacuum takes the dust up best. Dan spent his afternoon on the porch roof, sweeping dust and mortar chips down into the gutter, and then cleaning out the huge gutter. Lots of debris from the upper roof job ended up on this lower roof. He then put up some Xmas lights on our front door and over the entry.

(Mar 25th) Took this Christmas day off – sort of. The day was a most perfect sunny, mid-80s by afternoon with a light breeze that had a delightful smell. Being a most holy day, Carmen debated doing laundry, and finally decided that if God did not want her doing so, the day would not have been so perfect. Carmen started a puzzle. Dan measured f/shelves and floor levels for the addition.

We walked into town. Few people about. Sat in the park for awhile to enjoy the Xmas ambiance, close enough to the front door of the church that we were able to enjoy the singing inside. There were four brand new garbage trucks sitting in front of city hall, on display. Wonder if our route will be serviced by them?

Walked home by way of the Maria Guadalupe restaurant which is nine blocks straight north of our house on 11 Sur. Really good food, more exotic than the usual around here. Thought we had seen a sign advertising its reopening. It has been closed for remodeling. It was still closed, so we tottered on home and had a bowl of black bean with ham hock soup. Must say, this is the first time on Xmas without a special meal. The soup was delicious though. Sat on porch for awhile, enjoying the passers by. Dan read a book by Earl Emerson, a Seattle firefighter, that he had put on our reader from the Anacortes library, which we can get online books from, as long as we have an address there.

(Mie 26th) Drove to Pretensur to pay the balance on the tiles which are supposed to be delivered tomorrow. Needed more cash from the bank. We are allowed only 3000 pesos a day from the Banamex cash machine. Next to the Urbina hardware for plumbing parts, and on to make a pick up at Fester for another bucket of Acriton impermeabilizante. Upon returning home, Dan was told he needed to go to FortiFerre to get some alambre recocido (form-tie wire). Every time we need to go anyplace, we are glad we chose this location where everything is relatively close. We did briefly consider houses that would have been far from all we have here. Rightly, we decided we are too old for such remoteness and appreciate the convenience of being close to town.

Years ago we had some tacos with huitlacoche (corn smut) in Xalapa that were delicious. We found some canned, so tried it. Not the same deliciousness, so we'll be on the lookout for when it's fresh in season.

Carmen spent time with her flowers – replanting, watering, pampering. Dan then pressure cleaned the whole front area. While outside on the porch, Alex and his wife, which we did not before know he had, stopped by and chatted awhile. Amazing how friendly the neighborhood children are since they received money from us this past week, with their nightly singing at our gate.

We discovered one of the tiny dogs from next door, loose across the street. We rang the door bell to notify Valentin our neighbor, but no answer. Carmen searched their front fencing 'til she found where the tiny one had squirmed thru. Then fearing she might get bitten, she had Dan bring her some cat food to lure puppy. Puppy did not want the cat food. Since when does a dog not like cat food? Okay. Dan was called over to hold the fence open while Carmen pushed puppy thru. Whew! Puppy really needs a bath! He went home with no problem, except we fear he will be visiting us next time he breaks loose. He was very happy with the attention he received.

(Jue 27th) As we put our garbage out for collection, we cleaned up the street around our house. Actually the law says that we are responsible to the middle of the road in front of our house, but since no one cleans up along the banana fields, we do all the way across. Good exercise and looks so much nicer. Never much debris there. We are seeing some banana blossoms developing into - yep - bananas.

Our new concrete roof tiles were delivered by 11:30am. Our guys unloaded the 1000 tiles by hand, stacking them in the backyard on three sheets of plywood laid on the ground, two rows high. As they are needed, they will then have to climb a ladder with them to the roof top, three tiles at a time. Each tile weighs about 11¼ pounds. This morning before the delivery they worked on building the base for the mirador we are having put up there, using blocks, bricks and some foam-steel wire panels. When vacationing down here two years ago, we stayed at a hotel in San Marcos that had a roof top sitting area overlooking town. We enjoyed it so much that we decided to build one on top of our house while all the roofing is happening. Quite a view from up there. A welded metal stairway we'll have to have made will go up from the terraza on top of the new bathroom up to the lookout. One must reach the terraza from the master bedroom. Very private. Plan to have plants hanging between the two levels.

It is hard for us to have the crew work, when we have in the past done all our own work. Dan spent some time estimating what pipe, fittings, conduit and wire we'll need for the new addition, calculating the plumbing and wiring runs, and where we'll tie into the existing building systems.

(Vie 28th) Another trip to the central IMSS facility. This time Dan has an appointment with a urologist there. Eight o'clock am. We only waited two hours for the doctor to arrive, but arrive he did – perhaps he had surgery this morning?. The doc looked over Dan's papers and told him that he must come back for a PSA blood test and another consult afterwards. We tried to make the necessary appointments, but were told to return in the second week of January. No appointments could be made before that time.

Next we drove ten blocks further east to the Delter lumberyard to get quotes on timbers we need. The store was closed for the holidays. Our foreman tells us that the town he lives in has good prices on wood and the delivery is free so we'll probably just have him order it for us. Made our usual other stops on the journey back home. Carmen finished her afternoon off “working” on the jigsaw puzzle. Dan read and caught up on blogs & forums on the internet.

(Sab 29th) David came to the door once to see if we had any window screen. They needed to sift the sand finer for the finish coat on the mirador base's walls. We were not told to go buy it, so we forgot about it 'til later we looked out the window and saw sand being sifted thru a window screen. Dan went out and asked where they found it and David said that he ran up to the hardware for it. The fellows are allowed to charge there for our project. Bet David literally did run to the store. David is the one in the crew not closely related to the other three. He's the youngest and gets all the hardest drudgery jobs. More progress on laying tiles. Looks like it will take at least another week or two to finish this task, as laying the tiles accurately, adhering each one with mortar, is not as quick as nailing down shingles.

A laundry was done before the crew left since they were not eating lunch today, but leaving at two pm. Laundry was hung on front porch. After Dan dropped the crew off for the bus, he placed another order for cement and sand, to be delivered next Wednesday, the first workday of the new year. Sand – unlike in the US, the sand delivered here is something like pit run. It comes as a mixture of all sizes from small rocks to fine grains, so must be sifted for whatever size one wants. We are getting quite a pile of gravel from it!

23 December 2012

Se Vende Teja Vieja


Domingo 16 - Sábado 22 Diciembre 2012.  (Dom 16th) What a lovely surprise this morning – a three inch long beautiful green grasshopper on our front porch. It was seeming like it had a broken leg. Later in the week it was not moving. The new ant hill outside our front gate did not delight us. The third insect today? Yep, a cockroach was found under the rim of our toilet seat. Thank heaven it did not crawl on our butt while we sat on the toilet!! We flushed it down and it swam and swam and swam and came back up out of the water. Next it got squashed and flushed again. After watching for some time, we saw no return of the creature. We really do not see evidence of many cockroaches around here, considering the climate we live in.

Dan finished up the waste chute structure on top of the porch roof. Carmen sanded, then varnished the few pieces of trim on the inside of the windows that had been damaged by water condensing and running down the glass. Then prepped and started painting the exposed outsides of the windows with brown paint (the exposed area that we had to paint from inside the house, because of the screens on the windows). Finished the two windows in the room we are now sleeping in. Dan did some caulking around windows.

We have mentioned that several times a week someone stops here to ask directions. Today a bus driver asked for a place we have not heard of. We have never seen a bus on this street before. The driver managed to turn the bus around in the intersection, with the help of his ayudante. Beautiful new air-conditioned bus. They must have been picking up a tour group.

The window in one of the dining room french doors had a big gap at the top, due to the pane of glass sliding down too far. Dan removed two of the trim stop pieces, loosening the pane. Now the pane could be moved, but it was hard to find just the right width piece of something to wedge under the window glass to block it up in place. The magic fit turned out to be half of a wooden clothes pin, carved down thin with a knife. Stops back in place and a little caulk finished the job.

An exciting evening of TV. There were three movies in english playing at the same time, one to be watched and the others to be recorded for later viewing We have had no shortage of english shows on the television, subtitled in spanish. Several weekly series that we enjoy, plus the variety of movies.

(Lun 17th) Out of bed early today, at least early for us. We expected a crew of four fellows to arrive at 7am. Come 7:30 and they were still not here, so Dan drove to Frank's obra and found them. What they were doing there instead of here we do not know. Dan returned here with the crew plus a few borrowed hand tools from Frank. As Dan explained to the foreman that we needed to finish the waste chute's receiving bin on the road, the foreman informed Dan that he has to go to an office in town and get permission to start the job, and perhaps to put anything on the street. This is hard to believe since we see all sorts of building materials from jobs in process piled at the edge of the streets around here. The guys decide to work on the roof over the dining room first, as broken concrete from this area doesn't have to be pitched into the street. This lower roof is the access route to get to the higher part of the roof. So they go to work denuding this little roof of tiles first.

Dan immediately went to the office and found no one there. Seems that the office does not open 'til perhaps 9am. Dan got back and showed the guys his idea for a box-like receptacle on the street below the waste chute, and they put it together from the pallet-like bottoms of the old liftvans. Then Dan drove back to find the SETSE office to find it still closed (this about 10:15am.) So, Dan next visited the owner at the FortiFerre building supply store, as a likely person to know if we need a permit of some kind, and where to get it. He advised that since we weren't adding to or altering the house structure, just removing and replacing tiles, that no permit would be needed.

Carmen tried to put cats in our bedroom this morning, but that slippery white Smij got away and is in the smallest bedroom, under the single bed in the drawer again. We are worried that with the workers coming inside to use the bathroom, the cats could get out and be frightened with the noise and disappear. A fresh potty box, food and water are waiting for them in the bedroom we've been sleeping in. The room Smij has chosen has a door that we can not close 'til we trim off the bottom. Gardi cat of course likes to be part of the action. He is trying to figure out why all the noise on the roof top.

The task of trimming some off the bottom of the bedroom door now can't be put off, so we removed the door from its hinges, figured out the trim line to clear the spot on the floor where it sticks, set up a saw guide/jig to run the circular saw along, and sawed off the bottom. It was a minor difficulty to rehang the door since one of the hinges was a bit out of line. Carmen worked thru the afternoon, painting all the exterior surfaces of the upstairs windows which can be reached with the windows opened up. The paint we waited so long for works like a charm, looks great and goes on easily.

(Mar 18th) Our work crew arrived at 7:30am today and they worked hard on removing tiles from our house roof. Thank goodness for the chute Dan built for dumping the debris (escombro) off roof. We never got a permit for dumping debris on the road edge. A policeman rang our door bell, rather leaned on it 'til we answered the door. Dan was wondering what was going down, figuring that we were being fined or worse for not having that permit. Nope – the policeman only wanted a donation for their Xmas party. Turned out that the man had lived near Detroit for a few years, and yes, speaks some english.

First thing this morn, Carmen baked a peach pie. Shared it with the four workers at lunch time. Wonder what they really thought of it, since we have never seen a dessert of this sort here.

We have been having children rattling our front gate and ringing our doorbell late in the evenings. No adults with them. Children in US would never be out by themselves like this near nine o'clock. We can not figure out why they are doing this. Sometimes singing what might be snatches of Xmas carols, and sometimes rattling something. Sometimes carrying poles with glittery decorations. We did not go to the door, because we have been taking our showers after the workday at 6pm ready for a little TV and then an early bedtime. Certainly not dressed for answering a door for these children. Incidentally, there are public service announcements airing for free flu shots for everyone.

The puzzle continues. All this late activity started monday evening. Dan looked the situation up on the internet and discovered it is a yearly happening when children enact Mary and Joseph looking for a place to stay (a posada) for the night. According to the web, we are supposed to let in the children and give them something to eat and drink. Well, we aren't about to do that with our house in it's present state. So – we guess we are the mean north americans

(Mié 19th) First thing this morning Carmen baked some chocolate chip cookies. Dan wanted us to take some next door to the political office building, when he and Luis went over to ask if we could do some work on the wall between our buildings. Of course there is no problem with that, but we're being good neighbors by asking. Second thing today we went into town with our car, to the hardware for a diamond blade, got cash from bank and two fresh bakery rolls for lunch sandwich. Haven't found the occasional street corner sale of oranges by the large bag, as has happened in the recent past, and we want some fresh OJ! Walked from hardware up a couple blocks to the grocery store that has wednesday produce sales. No luck, so we drove the few blocks to the big Mercado Publico. This large market is at the opposite corner of town from our house. Here we found a large bag of oranges, so we are back into squeezing juice again! Nothing like a good fresh squeeze every day!

Next to the Fester store for five gallons of Acriton 10-year grade red roof sealer. While at that north end of Calle 11 Sur, we found a parking spot a block off the boulevard and parked the car – now nine blocks from home. Never saw the streets around this area parked so full! From here we walked a few blocks east on the main Fortín-Córdoba boulevard to the tianguis (weekly itinerant market) area. This area draws people from all over this corner of Veracruz. This is a many blocks long group of buildings plus tented areas that sells goods on wednesdays only – other days of the week the halls are empty.. The traffic along this road was solid and all but stopped today, so was no trouble crossing this usually difficult fast traffic road. Guess the wednesday before Xmas must be the busiest day of the year. The people shopping were hip to hip, so we only visited the first store sales hall. Also walked the sidewalk a ways, which we found more interesting, because the store had only clothing, at very good prices, and outside had much more variety. Crossed under the road where many goods were also displayed along the viaduct walls. Back to our car. Interesting adventure, but glad to be out of the crowds. Maybe on a less busy Wednesday, we will visit more of the sales areas.

While we were in town today, our foreman fell off the lower roof. He took the same fall that almost got Dan the week before. When climbing the ladder onto the roof at the laundry building, they held on to a tile at the top wall and the tile broke loose. Dan was luckily leaning inwards so he caught himself. Luis was not so lucky. He hurt his foot. He kept working though more slowly, with plans to visit the doctor in the evening We gave him an ace bandage to wrap the foot with. They did all leave an hour early because of this situation. If the foreman is not here, no one works, so it seems.

There was supposed to be a delivery of building supplies from FortiFerre – sand and cement. Never arrived. Seems their truck broke down and it is promised for tomorrow morn.

(Jue 20st) Workers arrived 7am today. Foreman José Luís is feeling better. The doctor said the problem was a dislocated bone in his foot. We left home at 8:30 this morning, with a busy day ahead. First we went to Pretensur, to place the order for our new concrete roof tiles. We had been there last week to make a final heated decision on which tiles to purchase. After this decision, we discovered that the sales person with us speaks some english! We had to park a ways from the store, since the road directly in front was torn up and being resurfaced. The Fortin-Cordoba, boulevard is getting a facelift with highly reinforced concrete paving. We deposited half the cost and the tiles are to be delivered on 27 December. The 26th we must go back to pay the other half. Then when the 1000 tiles are delivered, our crew must unload them. Hard to imagine there will be no lift gate at the rear of the delivery truck.

Next stop was Home Depot for trim wood for the window that has termite damage and a piece of galvanized angle to try out for roof flashing, plus our foreman asked us to buy a tape measure for him. Dan applied for a contractors pricing, which it looks like he got. HD posts all it's aisle-sticker prices without IVA tax, quite different from all the other stores, which list all prices including this 16% tax. Seems like the contractor pricing pretty much offsets the amount of the tax.

Next Carmen had to be at the dentist at 10:30. While she was there, Dan carried a tile taken from our roof, and walked a block to a tile store, to ask what replacement tiles like these would cost. Seems they would be a special order, as the only ones now made in that old style are a bit smaller. The new tiles would cost MX$8 a piece, so the cost of covering the roof we have with these clay tiles (2000 tiles or so) would be more or less the same as we are paying for the much larger, stronger and longer lasting concrete tiles. If we sell the approximately 1000 tiles that did not break in the removal from the roof, we can substantial recoup a good fraction of our roofing costs.  Guess we should post a Se Vende Tejas (Roof Tiles For Sale) sign on our front gate.

Dan came back to the dentist office and stayed in the room where Carmen is being worked on – because guess what – Dr Soley who speaks english is not here today. Only the endodontist Luis, from Orizaba, is here with the assistant. After another Xray and some poking about, it seems we must wait longer to see if the inflammation will go away, or if more surgery needs done. Have to return for another check in a week. Luis was very chatty today. He told us that he was from Brazil. He married a mexican lady, moved here and spoke no spanish. His wife had to do all the talking for him, so he can understand our situation. While at the dentists office, Dan asked what they could tell us about the night time posada activity at our front gate. They explained it all and told us that no, we did not need to have the children come inside. Just give the group a couple pesos (and more if the singing was really good) and they would be happy.

Next on our way towards home now, we stopped at the IMSS. We have to have paper work stamped for our next week specialist appointments that are at another location, the main hospital. Work here is no cost other than the original yearly fee, so far, but it surely does take a lot of trips into IMSS for paper work.

Now we traveled onwards to Metalurve hardware, for a bigger and better diamond saw blade. Next a stop at Walmart. Amongst other items, we bought a mexican fruit cake, and a ham which the stores always have some at this time of year, and not necessarily other times. When we got home and opened our bakery bag, we discovered that we had been given an extra Xmas bun. Long line here of course. Someone tried to cut in front of Carmen at the checkout line. Did not go over well and Dan straightened it out.

Upon arriving home, we discovered a large dump truck parked by our back gate. Yesterday this driver had stopped here, wanting the job of hauling our debris away. We told him that we had already arranged with someone else to do it. Well, a job is a job. This fellow came back and offered a deal that was much cheaper than the other party, plus his crew would do all the shoveling into the truck. Luis knew we would like this deal, so he hired him with our OK. Also saved us the money that we would have had to pay our crew for the shoveling time. And, saved our guys a lot of back ache. All was hauled away today. Two persons, the truck owner and his helper pitched the debris from the piles on the ground up into the high dumptruck shovel-full by shovel-full – all 6.5 cubic meters of it

Tonight, knowing about the posada traditions now, we put our showers off 'til later, left outside lights on and waited for our doorbell to ring. The first that Carmen heard some voices outside, she got so excited that in dashing from the couch to the dining room, she fell up the one step between the two rooms. Only a bumped knee thankfully. Finally she heard another group passing. They were walking past our house! Word must be out about us not playing at this game fairly. She hollered Hola! out the door and they came back. Believe one of the young fellows is the one who used to ring our doorbell and run fast, until Carmen was there at the right time and busted him by “hola-ing” out the window at him. These were the only ones to stop this evening.

About nine pm, as we were hanging laundry out on the front porch, since the line in the backyard (a construction site now) is down at present, there were many children passing by, some stopping and sitting on our road curb for awhile. They seemed to have been at a party. Probably at the school that is five blocks south of here.


(Vie 21st) First thing this morning, Dan took a garbage bag out and cleaned the party items from the roadway. Paper hats, candy wrappers, sparklies, and so on. Workers arrived a bit after 7am. They worked on a final pressure washing to clean off the roof. Next started the thin coating of cement that is not water permeable. Mixing the cement on the road and carrying it up the ladder by five gallon buckets.

The air is filled with the smell of beans and a ham bone simmering away. Started out misty today. The sun is peeking thru at present. A woman stopped hoping to sell us freshly cut up chicken. A man wanted to sell us peanuts and garlic. Men across the street checking out the banana field. One has a pencil behind his ear.

Dan spent this day drawing up plans for our new ground floor bathroom today. Our foreman, Luís, assured us that he can do all the work just as we want it, and seems very much in tune with how Dan had planned things out in his head. He also talked Dan into giving them all a raise as of the new year. A lot to them in pesos is not much to us in dollars. And they are working really hard. On the way back from dropping the guys at the bus stop where they get their ride back to Cosco, Dan placed an order for block (bloques), brick (tabiques) and other stuff for delivery monday.

Only one group of four boys singing at our gate tonight. They looked much like last night's group, except last night's group did not sing, but only beat their decorated stick on the ground and rattled their money cans.

(Sáb 22nd) Temperature outside at 7am was 55ºF for the second day. Still holding 68º inside. Yesterday we had a pot of beans with ham bone simmering to help keep what Carmen considers a chill out of the house. With a pork roast and some snickerdoodle cookies in the works, today the oven will temper the indoor environment again.

Dan had to go to the FortiFerre this morning to buy another bag of cement. Either he misunderstood the foreman when the original order was placed, or it is an add-on. Fellows will work only 7½ hours today, then they'll get their weekly pay. Their normal workweek is 10 hours, monday thru friday, and a partial day on Saturday. Today the thin coat of impermeable cement is still being applied. It was discovered that the placement of the rebar (varilla) in original roof slab was done incorrectly, as rusty rebar is visible in a few places, and this is where water was getting thru and dripping into our bedrooms. The new bonded impermeable layer will take care of this problem for us.

At 9am the gray skies brightened and the sun peeked thru a bit. Dan set up his router to trim the window boards we purchased this week, to more or less match what's there. Earlier this morning he went to use our hose out back that has been supplying water to the pressure washer, and found it has lost its male end connection. Gremlins? No, the crimp on connector had come off, and David had put it aside for Dan to fix again. Carmen found that the oven temp would not go above 325ºF with the roast in the oven, so had to remove it 'til cookies were baked. An hour later temp had made it to 400º with the roast well on its way.

A productive week on the house remodeling. The upper roof's tiles were removed, lots of debris removed, and now about 60% of that roof is capped with the Impercem layer, The marquesinas and roof overhangs that were in the way of the future project of building the full bath addition were removed. Dan added up the hours that the four guys worked this week, 54 each. Our labor costs for the work week came to just a little over US$400. Our crew is happy with us and we are happy with them. With their pay in their pockets, Dan gave a lift to the crew to the area of the big tianguis for some gift buying, before they head back to Coscomatepec for the rest of the weekend. The market space is open this special week for Christmas shoppers, thru the 24th. The guys will go to the futbol game Sunday in their hometown and be back to work on Christmas Eve (Noche Buena) day.

18 December 2012

Pescaditos Secos


Domingo 09 - Sábado 15 Diciembre 2012.  (Dom 09th) Carmen baked the chocolate chip cookies from the dough that was made yesterday, using the semi-amargo chips we bought at Josefina's. We had forgotten how good they are. As they came out of the oven, the velador showed up to collect for a week's night-watchman service. Dan gave him a freshly baked cookie – will this insure a watchful eye on our property at night? Dan washed our car, as it hadn't been touched (except by a neighbor's cat's paws) since we arrived here in early September. We figured a dusty car would detract from the noticeability of the Washington plates, and get us more safely past the transito police – so far this seems to have worked!

Next he went on top of the laundry building and used our pressure washer to clean the flat roof and parapet walls there, and some of the tiles topping the marquesina (awning-like roof). He had wondered whether the washer would work here, as the city water pressure is very low, just enough to bring the water into the top of the tinaco on a three-story building, so it would be about 14psi or so. Very difficult to get a hard spray from a nozzle screwed on to a garden hose. What a mess the pressure-washing left down below! Next he had to rewash the car two more times, and the side of the house, because everything was now covered with dirt from the roof. He finished up cleaning off the steep apron and sidewalk outside the backyard vehicle gate, removing the green algae/mold that made that sloping area slick when it was wet from rain.

(Lun 10th) We heard the knife sharpener man going by. He has a special whistle he blows as he walks. If you need a knife sharpened – dash outside with it. One day last week a fellow stopped at out gate with freshly dug red red potatoes. Carmen bought 2 kg. The day before a man was here with nutty brittle-like cakes. Also ladies have been here this past week with Xmas baskets and pasto which last year we thought might be a dried pasta since it was in the fresh produce bins. It is actually a dried spanish moss, used for Xmas decorations, creche scenes and the like. Glad we did not try to cook it up and eat it.

(Mar 11th) Home Depot grand opening today. We were there by nine and the parking was already overflowing, and we had to park out on the edge of the highway. Guess we are not the only ones hoping to find different items. We were unable to find some longed for items, like duplex (two headed) nails. Clerks think we are so funny, as they immediately imagine a nail with a head on each end. How can one hammer such a thing into wood? These nails simply seem to be unavailable here.  We're putting together a list commonly found items NoB, which are just unknown down here SoB.

Next Carmen had another dental appointment to continue the root canal process. Then a stop at Chedraui—the freezers here just are not cold enough for icecream, and most of the cartons were soft to the touch, perhaps having lost volume thru melting and refreezing. Back home, Dan spent some time helping Don Clark with his skype connection.

(Mié 12th) Walked into town for copies, to tap the ATM at the bank, and to finally set up with Cablecom for auto-payment from our local checking account. On the walk home, a traffic policeman smiled and said, “Hello”. Our brown paint for our windows was supposed to be here today, after being at least a month on order.  So we stopped by, and... it was not there.  The store manager was more than apologetic, and said he would go into Cordoba to the warehouse and get it later today, and deliver the four liters to our house.  On the walk home from there we met several teen boys and one spoke to us in english. Dan helped folks at Skagit River Resort installing programs, via skype.  In the late afternoon the paint was delivered, less a special 30% discount for our trouble, plus a promise of a 20% discount on all the paint products we needed later in the renovation.

(Jue 13th) Took a bus into Cordoba today for a checkup on how the root-canaled tooth was healing, since the office is on the Avenida 11 bus route. The dentist was amazed we had taken the bus, so we presume he has rarely if ever traveled that way himself. And when told that we walked 11 blocks to catch that bus – well, he just could not imagine doing that. Actually we rather enjoy the adventures of bus riding. For the first time in a year, we actually had a newish comfortable bus both directions. Still waiting to see if the infection is totally gone in Carmen's tooth area.

When we left the dentist, we walked the four blocks to a large hardware. On the way, we met one of our neighbors. He was walking from his bus stop to work. Bet he was as surprised as we were to see a neighbor on the city sidewalk, so far from home.

(Vie 14th) We stopped by IMSS to pick up Carmen's envio, a scheduled appointment at the big hospital with an internist. Even though we now have both envio's in hand, we have to return to get the forms validated a day or two before the actual appointment. Checked with the director's office to find no positive action on the solicitud which would allow us both to go to the same doctor. We will keep trying. Strolled thru Home Depot at leisure. Made some good discoveries of stuff we haven't been able to find locally before, and came home with another plant.


Stopped by Walmart for icecream. Dan discovered an end-aisle seasonal display of dried shrimp and dried tiny whole fish. He had previously looked up what the heck these things were used for. Ground up the dried shrimp (camarones secos) are used in pozole rojo, and the tiny shrimp and fish (dried anchovies, boquerones secos) for soups. Or they can be eaten out of hand as a snack. So Dan, who likes seafood of all kinds bought a ¼ kilo tub, and has been snacking on them every night. The taste like sardines (they are not salty) and rehydrate a bit quickly in the mouth after you crunch into them. Carmen wouldn't touch them with a 3-meter palo, although she bought a block of saltcod (bacalao) to cook up (eg, stink up the house) to make codfish gravy, one of her winter treats. So – how can Dan's tiny fish smell so horrid to Carmen and the salt cod smell like ambrosia? That is the question. Quite amazing to see tables heaped with these items in the stores.

(Sáb 15th) We worked very hard today, working on tasks that need to be done before the work crew shows up on monday. Using sheets of scrap plywood and 2x4s from the disassembled liftvans, Dan started on a chute of sorts to be used getting broken tiles and chipped-off mortar down off the upper roof. The tall vertical box-like structure sits on the lower porch roof, and has a sloping bottom so the waste will end up along the sidewalk and street edge on the north side of the building. This required hauling materials, some precut on the ground, up ladders to the roof, and two of us working to get them nailed or screwed into place.

While Dan cut and figured out the chute materials, Carmen worked on painting all the exterior woodwork on the five second story windows over the porch roof, working off little platforms Dan progressively moved down the roof and tied securely to the window bars. Unfortunately we found a couple window trim boards riddled by termites. They will be replaced soon. Also found that two boards had been replaced earlier, presumably for the same reason. At least they were different color and wood. We were unbelievably exhausted by evening time. Was a truly beautiful day weather wise.

12 December 2012

Pruebas del Laboratorio


Domingo 02 - Sábado 08 Diciembre 2012.  (Dom 02nd) We finally took time to walk into the Unidad Deportiva (sports center) in town. Inside the gate we found a soccer field with bleacher-type seating along one side, outside basketball/tennis and racket ball courts, and child's play equipment. Inside was a huge multipurpose/basketball court with seating on both sides, restrooms, etc. The food service facility served over counters to the outside and inside venues. Quite elaborate for such a small town, and lots of community events are staged here.

Carmen finally dug up and transplanted four plants from our property. The hoja santa came from outside our back gate and went out front between the low front wall and huge vainilla orchid. We will have to keep it carefully trimmed short, which will be no easy feat the way everything grows so fast here. Other plants she planted at the base of the bugambilia near the NW corner of our back area. Dracena reflexa we believe is the name of one plant. Another plant is possibly a tree daisy or tree marigold. At least the leaves look to be this. So far the plant is but a few inches tall. The other plant is a large purple leafed wandering jew. These transplantings are in preparation for our roof work and new bathroom projects, getting the plants that existed here out of the way of construction. Oh, don't believe we mentioned this before – the grass here is mostly mondo grass, which sends up small star shaped yellow flowers, within a week after being cut. Also lots of shamrock.

(Lun 03rd) Dan is working on the screening panel, to lean in front of the fireplace, where we have placed the cat litter box. The updraft there works pretty well at taking odors away. He is matching this screen to the look of the cat walkway near ceiling, with a large white panel with stained & varnished surrounding trim. Five days of laundry hanging in the backyard, and the beets cooking are filling the air with a good earthy odor.

The time has come to plant some calendula seeds we brought from our property in Anacortes. They are yellow and hopefully some white.

(Mar 04th) A day of new adventures. We were outside the laboratorio at the IMSS hospital by 6:45am, having found a lucky parking space but a block away from the hospital. We were to show up between 7am and 8am for our appointed pruebas (tests), blood draws for both of us and a urine sample for Dan. To our surprise, there were at least 30 others there already. Thanks to one lady who told us to put our papers for the tests on the counter on top of the stack already there, we quickly got with the program. The chairs were full, so we leaned against the wall. Within the next fifteen minutes there were over one hundred more people waiting for blood tests. We saw one older lady stick her lab slip farther down in the pile; sneaky. At 7:05am the lights came on in the office and two attendants appeared. Also lights came on in the room where we assumed the blood draws were taken. Next two rolling tables were wheeled into the waiting area. On top of one was a small P/A system. Now one of the attendants, in nurses uniform, came out into the center of the waiting room and told everyone to move back along the walls and out into the antechamber, and leave an open space down the middle of the room. Does this sound like going for an appointed blood draw in the US?

Now, about 7:15am, names are starting to be called, in order that the papers were stacked, and the person called walks to the window and is given a sticker label for the urine sample – to be then placed on the tables. A few people were there to only drop off urine samples. If there was a blood test ordered, the patient is given a needle in its sterile package, along with the needed number of labeled vials for blood. Next one steps into a short line and waits for the next person to be called into the draw room, where three nurses are taking blood. Simply hand your items to the nurse. He or she cleans your arm with prepared alcohol cotton swabs, draws the blood into the tubes you have given them, gives you another cotton alcohol swab to hold on your arm and off you go. Results are sent in to your doctor for your visit two days later. Never have we seen so much efficiency! We were finished by 7:45.am A few folks were still coming in and adding the lab order slips to another pile on the counter. Used the restrooms, which rarely have toilet paper, but we know to take our own.

Now we have two hours before Carmen's dental appointment. We walked a couple blocks before we found a restaurant for breakfast. The blood test was a fasting one and we are now starving, or at least we think we are. Headed toward the central park in Cordoba and saw the Christmas tree and decorations already in place here. Walked further to the Waldos dollar store and bought some more oatmeal cookies and more glass wide mouth storage jars with wire bales. These do a good job of keeping ants out.

Drove the ten blocks to the dentist, where Carmen experienced the two dentists working on her for two hours. After Xrays and much poking and prodding, the decision was made to leave the tooth in. Turned out that the abcess was not in the tooth's nerve, which the root canal procedure today revealed had been long dead. The necrotic tissue was removed. An antibiotic injection was put into the base of the tooth. We were sent home with a return date of next tuesday. Hopefully the infection would not flare up again, but were given a prescription, just in case.

Shopped at Walmart, since we drove right past it on the way home. Tuesday is the day for fresh fruit and veggie sales. For instance, the best buy was the mandarins at US$0.10 a pound.


(Mié 05th) Took Gardi out on the front porch with us, on his leash. Dan measured for all the mitered frame boards for the fireplace screen, and with a home-made jig and Carmen's help, cut them. He misses his radial arm saw for jobs like this, but it was just too bulky to ship down here for the occasional use, since almost all construction here is with concrete, brick and block. He then filled and sanded the frame pieces in preparation for varnishing. Carmen filtered lumps out of dirt and filled flower pots in preparation for planting flower and salad greens seeds. Since we were working out on the front porch and in the front yard all day, there were lots of opportunities to greet our passersby. At least they're seeing that the gringos on the corner get their hands dirty working just like the normal people.

(Jue 06th) Doctor's appointments for each of us, to get the blood and urine tests results. Carmen was immediately sent to a nutritionist consultant. Her cholesterol was a bit high, and the consult nurse made a few suggestions. But, in general, it seems that we are eating properly. The nurse commented on the reported high level of obesity in the US, and that people moving down here generally experience an improvement in their diet due to the larger variety of inexepnsive fresh produce. (We each have lost 20 pounds or so since moving here.) Carmen has to return in a month for a follow-up. Meanwhile she has to go to the IMSS archivo office, to pick up an envio (approved referral) next week to get an appointment with a specialist to treat her scleroderma. Dan has to pick up an envio also, to get an appointment with an urologist. Also we made it a point to talk to the jefe today to ask to have Dan's doctor changed to the same one that Carmen has, to make appointments easier, since Dan translates for Carmen. We were given the name & address of head of the IMSS facility here so that Dan can write a solicitud (request) to him. This is not something that anyone else at IMSS can do prior to our anniversary date next August.

Shopped at Josefina's for more of those delicious shelled peanuts with salt and lime on them. Went to the China Azteca store for more paper lantern covers for the three remaining indoor hanging light bulbs inside the house. Also shopped at the Chedraui store for fish, cheese, and etc. We still have not found a calendar, but this store said they would be coming in later in the month.

(Vie 07th) Carmen dug up the grass & weeds in front of house along inner wall and planted seeds. Will they grow or will snails and slugs devour them? Also water-soaked the pots that are full of dirt, waiting for seeds. These are various favorite food plants & flowers seeds from the US that we were not sure we could buy here, which managed to get across the border with us in September. Dan started the varnishing on the fireplace screen frame, and clear-varnished the garden bench which sits on the front porch. We used the water-based clear varnish which took us so long to obtain—it went on very easy and cleanup was a snap – what a change from the regular high-VOC varnish we had been using.

(Sáb 08th) The fireplace screen is finished. Walked up to Ania & Franks new “in town” house. Got an invite to their home for a Sunday afternoon meal, along with maybe a board game. Dan talked with the fellow who will be our roof renovation foreman, José Luís. They arranged that a four-man crew will be starting here December 17th. Yea! Frank said we might get a free calendar at the FortiFerre store, so we took the time to walk there on the way home. The calendar doesn't have any spaces for notes, but is in english & spanish, has all the Mexican, Canadian & US holidays noted, and labels all the days with the patron saint names & religious observances so important here.

Today we had fish filet topped with a crust of those luscious lime peanuts which were crushed. Just no end to delicious foods, no matter where you live, if you apply a little imagination when choosing ingredients. Carmen also made the first batch of chocolate chip cookie dough since arriving here in Mexico. Will be a bit different since the sugars we purchased are coarser granules and the butter and margarine are a bit different in flavor.

02 December 2012

Muchas Llaves


Domingo 25 Noviembre - Sabado 01 Diciembre 2012.  (Dom 25th) Ania & Frank picked us up at 9am, for the half hour trip north to Coscomatepec. As we said we'd do the lunch,we took some homemade cabbage, nut, apple slaw and fresh pineapple. Bought a broasted chicken in Cosco. Had a wonderful day on the hills above town. Carmen and Ania did some weeding and lots of chatter. Dan and Frank drove to their the hill top hexagon cabin to check things out. The streets thru Cosco are very narrow, hilly and cobbled. Came home with what they call California lemons (huge, like large grapefruit), oranges, prickly chayote, and some ground-planted stems of orchids, all from their property in the avocado grove north of Cosco.


(Lun 26th) Dan spent some time getting ready to caulk around windows. Many need this done as panes are installed without putty and the stops holding some of the windows leave the glass loose, or even with an edge unsupported where the glass has been carelessly cut. Being that we could not get into our house without three keys, Dan has been spending time crafting spaces for hidden keys. With the house doors and windows all protected by cemented-in wrought bars, there is no option of just breaking a window to enter – a set of keys is a must. If we both misplace or forget to put our keys in a pocket, we would be shut out with not many options for getting in.


(Mar 27th) Why must two cats have their play time of around and around and over the bed at 5:30am? Stopping now & then thru the next two hours to give us loving pats and purrs.

This morning, Carmen tried out her oven again. She learned she must keep it turned to it's highest setting to keep it at 400º F. She made a lemon meringue pie from half of the lemons we got yesterday. While the pie cooled, we walked into town. Another beautiful day! The paint store says our order will be here soon. Another bank stop and hardware stop. Also Dan had taken the cylinder out of the front door lockset and we took it along with a newly made key to the locksmith. The key does not work, despite the locksmith working on it twice, and having the cylinder in the shop will insure a good result this time. Stopped by the correos office to leave a little monetary gift for our postman. He's only delivered two pieces of mail to us, but his family depends on his annual tips from Dia del Cartero, and we've seen him rarely as he delivers when we have been out and about. The gift will perhaps remind him to give us good service this coming year. Stopped by the grocery store for some vanilla ice cream, and some local coffee liqueur for Dan to drizzle on it.

The pie turned out great, one of the best Carmen has made, and she has baked many in the past. Recipe from the Joy of Cooking cookbook. Guess the oven is a keeper. The taste of the pie was not like one made from the typical lemons found NoB, but winningly yummy. Dan called Ania and told her that if Frank would stop by on his way home, that we would give them a couple pieces. Ania suggested she would trade some fresh homemade banana bread for it. Quite a fair trade we would say! Frank stopped by for the bakery trade just as it was getting dark. Chocolate banana bread! Somehow, Dan messed up the front gate lock and now the key won't fit. So the front yard is just latched by hand tonight.


(Mie 28th) Still enjoying the ground orchids that Ania gave us, now in a bud vase in living room. They are sort of a mauve with their usual freckles. Dan talked Carmen into going up on top of the laundry building roof to paint the propane tank today. He has somehow hurt his right wrist. Must be too much retirement. Carmen was in the scalding sun for an hour, and during this time Dan worked on getting our domain email functioning again, after the server change back in the US. While on the roof, Carmen could see over the privacy walls while the neighbor lovingly brushed his dog. Also she dodged some butterflies. She finished the job and called to Dan to come up and inspect for missed spots. No sooner did Dan arrive than Carmen's finger flipped out and knocked the paint can over. What a mess. Really did not need the roof painted with rustoleum. On the way down off the roof – over the edge of the laundry roof parapet, across a few feet of slippery tiles, and on to the ladder – Dan got two big spider bits on his left arm. Likely from the foliage of the one tall plant we had to maneuver thru while on the ladder. Took quite a while to clean paint off of us.
Dan spent time working at troubleshooting the front gate lock. There were no options to take the lock to a locksmith, since some unthinking person in the past welded the lock to the gate. He ended up using a large paper clip on the outside of the gate to access the pins, and the key which only would go partway into the cylinder on the inside, essentially picking the lock. He must have learned how do this from watching too many criminals portrayed on TV, since he really didn't know what he was doing. At any rate, it works again. Since the lock now functioned, the extra key went into a hidden spot he's made for it.

(Jue 29th) Dan's spider bites look like goose eggs. Going to spend the day with lots of hot compresses trying various lotions and liquids to take away the itching and swelling. Carmen went out back and chopped down the about nine feet off the top of the plant. Saw that it did indeed have a large spider nest hidden in the leaves. She dragged the plant into the banana field across the street, and discarded it there.

Walked into town to get the lock cylinder for front door. It works again – the locksmith had to cut a totally new llave (key) for it, as he couldn't fix the one he'd made earlier. Speaking of llaves, how did we get so many to carry around with us? Wasn't like this NoB. Here every door and gate requires a different type of key to lock it. Counting thru our key rings: front yard gate, front door gate, front door, back door lockset, back door interior padlock, back yard car gate, back yard second gate, laundry room. Plus a key for four same-keyed padlocks & chains which are used to lock up the extension ladder to the wall and the back door gate when we're gone with the car, and the other two to double lock the outer gates when we're gone for long periods. The car keys are on separate key rings, only used when we're driving somewhere. This says nothing for keys we don't carry around with us, like for the front & back door deadbolts, filing cabinet & strongbox, and various other locks, like for the bedroom doors, etc.

Walked over to the town center, and tapped the ATM again. While in the park, there was a woman sweeping the open spaces & sidewalks, as there nearly always is, with a very long palm frond. Much more effective than a push broom. The paint store told us the paint would be in next thursday. Lot's of sidewalk vendors out today, so we guessed that thursday is the day for people in Fortin to have their tianguis, or street market. The big tianguis on the boulevard going into Córdoba is Wednesday, and Sunday there is a huge used car market in the same area. We bought another piña on the walk home. This one is on the verge of being too ripe – about to turn. Spent some time near a tall bush bearing daisy-like flower 10 to 15 feet in the air, taking pictures to put here. Hopefully one will turn out.

Looking back at this paragraph, we note that we have begun to follow spanish conventions, and have stopped capitalizing certain words, that for some anachronistic reasons, are still capitalized routinely in english: languages, days of the week, month names and the like. Feels good to do this, as we never could figure out why such importance was being given to these common words.


(Vie 30th) This is finally the day for Carmen's tooth to be pulled. We left home early, so as to make some quick shopping stops on the way. First we pulled up in front of OxiVer, a welding supply shop, for a small propane tank which Dan will need for working on the copper plumbing pipes. No luck. Then a stop at the Office Depot for a calendar and another look at software – a big two aisle display of appointment books & schedulers, but not a single wall-hung calendar in the store. The only software in the store was utility and security programs, and some office suites.

We parked near the dentists office early, so Carmen went up there (three flights of stairs) to wait, and Dan went across the street where he saw a possible place to buy the propane tank – again no luck, and he was referred to a store downtown. Meanwhile, the dentist arrived a few minutes after Carmen and started explaining in english that he had consulted a friend, an endodontist, on Carmen's situation and together they decided that a different procedure, an endoposta, would be better than pulling the tooth. Dan arrived and Dr Soley happily explained the procedure to Dan in spanish. We are to return to his office tuesday, when both he and the endodontist will be working on Carmen. The top of the tooth will be removed, then the gum will be cut back. Next the nerve will be removed (the root canal procedure or endodoncia, but much easier to perform as the upper part of the tooth is not in the way). Then antibiotic will be put down in the affected area, and the tooth will be allowed to drain and heal. On the subsequent visit, the tooth's nerve space gets fitted with a post, which will support a replacement tooth, all to get capped with a bridge. The procedure leaves the good, well-anchored, natural root in place – a much less invasive procedure in all. Now aren't you happy to know all this? Perhaps some of you have had this procedure done before.

After we left the dentist's office we checked the yellow pages which we carry in the car. No listing for the store that was recommended to Dan for the propane tank. He did notice that that another possible source was listed, just two more blocks down Avenidia 11, so he left Carmen in the car to wait while he checked it out. The store he found, specializing in hard-to-find plumbing and industrial fittings, did not sell these small tanks (that one can find in every hardware store in the US, but not here), but, he got directions to another place two blocks away. Yes, that store, the Casa del Plomero, had a few in stock, and he returned to the car, finally successful.

Upon arriving home, Carmen decided to make another lemon meringue pie. Too bad Frank did not just happen to stop by, since this, we learned, is his favorite pie. Moments after she started the pie, her brother Guy who lives in Pennsylvania., skyped us. He (ie, the netbook with webcam) got to sit on the kitchen counter and chat while Carmen baked. That was fun. Carmen took the pie out of the oven and set it on the counter next to Guy, just as Gardi noticed that she was talking to Guy on the netbook. Being that Gardi cat likes to say hello, he leaped up on the counter, just missing landing in the pie. Kitty got scolded. Carmen put the netbook on the floor next to Gardi where he could do a more appropriate greeting, complete with stretches, etc. Not sure how Guy felt about being sat on the floor for the kitty hello.

Next Peggy skyped. She said they were having a wet time in Santa Cruz, Calif, with possible flooding predicted. Carmen took Peggy (ie, the netbook) outside to see if she knew the name of the plant that Carmen cut down. Always great to hear from friends.

Dan's spider bite swelling has gone down in size, though the itching's still there, so the hot compresses continue. In the afternoon Carmen climbed to the roof top to put a white coat of paint on the propane tank. She enjoys painting as long as Dan cleans out the brushes and painting tools. Now finally time for the meal, so we consumed the vegetable soup Carmen made yesterday, expecting not to be able to chew today, warmed up and with addition of cut-up sausages. Yes, also lemon pie. Sunny day.


(Sab 01st) Food note: You never know where you will find hot chilies or lemon. Carmen bought a small bag of Cheetos to find them very hot with chili peppers. This week she wanted some marshmallows for hot chocolate. Bought a small package of miniature ones at the checkout counter. They tasted like lemon . Not so good in hot chocolate.

Dan took off walking the nine blocks to Ania & Franks new place, as he wanted to talk to Frank about how to go about paying the crew when they are working here. Only halfway there, they drove past and took him the rest of the way. They were a bit early, as they were planning to go to Ania's daughter Kalina's home in Boca del Rio, next to Veracruz City, for the weekend. Dan revealed that Carmen had baked another pay merengue de limon, and if they stopped by Frank could get a piece. No problem convincing them, and after they dropped Dan off at home they left with two pieces of pie on a paper plate. They were headed out to babysit the grandchildren. They said they enjoy going down to the beach during the winter, as long as it was before March when it again becomes hot and humid. Perhaps we should try this some time, as long as we avoid those few“northers” that bring cold winds down from the wintery US, making even a walk on the beach unpleasant.

Thereafter, Dan finished the repair on a bedroom window screen and we put it back in place, which was difficult since it is a really tight fit. Spent some time reading. Our Smij cat honored us with her presence for awhile. We rarely see her during the day.