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!