(Domingo 01 -
Sábado 07 Septiembre) Now that our medium
sized bedroom has a bed in it, it is time to move the stored wood out of
this room. But where shall we store it? Next problem, the hose
hanger that Dan installed in the front of the house has got to be
moved to a more accessible location. He had put it where it looked
best, right over the hose bibb, but too many plants got crushed when
doing the watering with it. Much time was spent on cleaning up our
backyard area.
It was our
understanding that on the first and fifteenth of the month, the
Similares (generics) drugstores in town had a twenty-five per cent
discount, so we walked into Fortín center to stock up on the meds
that Carmen cannot get dispensed from IMSS. She is allergic to the
brand IMSS carries, and they stock only one of each formulation.
Turns out that this month, since the 1st falls on a
sunday, that the deal is on the second, monday. Since our hands are
empty, we wandered thru the flower market shops. Carmen
unfortunately wants one of everything. Luckily our property will not
hold that many plants. We came home with only six. We are still
looking for a hen & chicks plant.
A man came to our
back gate, selling plant stands made from black enameled rebar, and
we bought one which holds five plants. Carmen spent time
transplanting her herbs into the colorful little pots we bought to
fit the stand. The pots are too small for all the herbs that she
started from seed, so we now find these herbs here and there
throughout other pots. The two long planters that had the herbs now
sit empty, waiting for...?
Early in the day we
did some skype “video messages” of the panoramic views from our
mirador, to send to some friends. Thought we would be able to
copy and resend to others, but have not figured out yet how to send a
video to more than that one person. We are still waiting to do more
videoing, when we're home in the morning, and not otherwise occupied,
when Mt Orizaba is not hiding behind clouds, as it does by 10am, or
earlier, at this time of year. The radio station we listen to in the
mornings reminded us that September is the mas lluvioso mes del
año (the rainiest month of the year) here.
Monday morning we
were at IMSS by eight am for Carmen's monthly appointment to get her
prescriptions reauthorized and filled. Our time was for 9am and we
were taken at 10 am. Seems that one has a two hour wait, no matter
what time one arrives, because people are taken in order of their
arrival, not according to appointment time. Just take a book to
read, enjoy people watching, or napping,
Next stop was
grocery shopping. (Carmen got a surprise when sorting thru the carrot
bin. A fellow, dressed as an employee, looked her in the eye and
said buenos dias, with a great big smile! The surprise was that he
is our next door neighbor, Valentin. So now we know he works here at
Walmart.) We had invited Ania and Frank for dinner wednesday, so we
needed to stock us on some foods for the planned menu. Today's new
item that we found at the store is smoked tuna, at half the price of
un-smoked tuna steaks right next to them in the case. Always
interesting to see what new foods will be here each time we shop.
Could be anything from canned goods, meats, fresh veggies or fruits
we are unaccustomed to. Adds to our excitement of being here. Hmm,
a fresh spinach bread too. Carmen used to bake bread frequently, but
the stores we shop at have such a good variety, that she rarely has
this task, though her bread is a different sort than what bakeries
produce here. Yep – this was likely written before, but breads
deserve lots of mentions!
Got our 25%
discount Monday at the Similares drugstores. Thankfully we did our
bank stop the day before, as there was a block-long line waiting for
the ATM, being the first monday of the month. Stopped by the grocery
store in town to buy some beets for a salad. They usually have good
fresh ones, and there were none at Walmart today. Found a fresh
pineapple at a fruit stand. And lastly we went to the electric
company to pay our two month bill of less than US$25. Electricity is
expensive here, but we are in the lowest bracket that still gives a
special discount to small consumers, as our only electric usage comes
from lights and outlets (TV, computers, refrigerator, and a rarely
used fan, which we used only twice this past year).
Since we installed
the wide eaves trough along the edge of part of our back roof, we now
have a deluge in one spot at then end of the gutter, instead of all
along this ten foot area. We wanted to keep the water from falling
onto the terraza just outside our bedroom door. That part is
working great. Now we have a waterfall effect hitting the ground
level patio. We bought some white largish decorative rocks from Home
Depot, and put them in a large tray, so that the water falling from
the roof now drops into there and more slowly leaves the area and
flows out of the slightly slanted parking area to the street, instead
of drowning the planting area which it is adjacent to. Unfortunately,
the harder it rains the farther out the water falls, missing the
landing spot we made for it. Back to the drawing board!
Tuesday the young
lady at DIF called us, to come in to their office in Fortín to
finalize the paper work and receive our senior INAPAM id cards.
These will give discounts on public transportation, admissions, and
some stores. We feel almost guilty for taking advantage of this
program, but we are gray haired now. This gobbled up a couple
hours of time. As we walked home, we saw the grader just finishing
scraping up the escombro (dirt & debris) the city had left
on the road, from doing our sewer connection. Now, aside from some little patching of the steps which Dan will do, our construction job is at an end.
We
unpacked our pictures and together we got those hung on the walls.
The hardest part was of course, deciding where to put each one. Also
we hung some of our fabric hangings, like Dan's Yale rug in the
stairwell. This was a tricky job, on top of a ladder and stretching
to reach high on the wall over the open stairwell, to set the
anchors. Also put one of Dan's mom's quilts over the new bed, and a
colorful batik we purchased when on a cruise in the Caribbean –
from Caribelle Batik at Romney Manor on the island of St Kitts
(http://www.caribellebatikstkitts.com/caribelle_batik.asp).
Still have a lovely piece from Italy that Dan's daughter, Harmony,
gave us from when she was in school there for a semester. We are
looking for just the right pieces of local color for a couple spots
of wall yet.
Dan spent a couple
hours cleaning while Carmen did some cooking for the next days meal,
both of which continued the next day. Finally there was a day when
Ania & Frank could get together with us for a meal on our
rooftop! We four have had many past weeks of sore backs or bad
weather or house guests which have prevented this meal from happening
high up on the mirador. Wanting a nice meal, but easy to
carry up all those steps, was a dilemma.
Carmen went the
route of appetizers, with nothing hot. Carrying items up the steep
stairway is not too difficult, but bringing them back down is a feat!
So – in a five gallon bucket, were stacked, all the plates, soup
cups, silverware and water and wine glasses. Next came the smoked
tuna, deviled eggs and stuffed mushrooms. Then the biscuits made
with some cornmeal, chorizo sausage and cheese to the usual dough,
topped and covered with and table cloth and napkins. Dan carried the
bucket, just like a picnic basket! Carmen carried the room
temperature carrot soup in a pitcher. Ania took the bottle of wine
and water pitcher, and Frank carted the large bowl of a salad of
cooked beets, apple, garbanzo beans, broccoli, and grapes with a fat
free caesar dressing, on a bed of butter crunch lettuce. Most
elegant looking and oh so delicious! Earlier Dan had carried a card
table and chairs up.
The view is so very
gorgeous from the top of our house. There was a wee breeze and no
flies until a moment after Carmen foolishly remarked about no bugs!
Frank suggested that we install a zip line between our houses. Wow!
Wouldn't that be something, going over town and cane fields from our
mirador to the hill they live on! While packing up to carry
all back down the stairs, Dan managed to flip the wine cork and
opener off the deck onto the roof top. He retrieved it, which gave
us all a bit of excitement. After carrying our items back down, we
played a game of rummy cube. Ania won, as usual. Then we had our
dessert. Carmen made a cheesecake, and it was the worst she had ever
made – extremely dense. Why? Who knows, maybe the cream cheese
brand, over baking it, or not whipping long enough? It was sad, and
a challenge for the next time she attempts it.
Ania brought a
plant for Carmen that she had started, and Carmen sent her home with
several starts she had been hoping for. Unlike us, they have a huge
piece of property, so lots of room for more plants, which is good
since they have almost one of everything. They also have room for
trees, shrubs, and tall and sprawling plants. Lucky them – or
maybe not – all that yard area requires a lot of upkeep, and we
have purposely left that part of our lives behind us.
Needless to say,
the next day for breakfast we had party left overs – in the form of
an omelet stuffed to falling apart with fresh mushrooms, smoked tuna,
broccoli and tomato, with a good local gouda cheese And there were
two biscuits left to be freshened in the toaster oven. Oh yum.
Yogurt on the side of course.
Dan has been going
over tax returns for some northern folks. Carmen fluttered through
the day with the plants. Amazing how time consuming they can be.
Before these fun things, though, we had a lonnnng spanish lesson
while sitting up on the mirador. Most difficult for Carmen to
concentrate up there. Too many things to keep track of – birds,
butterflies, Gardi cat who joined us, cars on the street below,
people walking by, and even a plane flew over. In Anacortes we had
frequent overflights, but here they are rare and this was probably
only a business jet, unlike the frequent fighter jets in the US from
the Whidbey Island Naval Air Station. We're glad to be missing the
sometimes annoying “sounds of freedom.”
A tropical storm
was predicted for the afternoon, so laundry was hung out early and
dried. The rainy weather was later than predicted and never did get
really bad here. Carmen made some ginger cookies to help us thru the
evening. She makes and freezes dough in small batches, then bakes
them off in the toaster oven, just enough to eat up right away.
We always take in
about an hour or so of evening TV news on ForoTV (and sometimes a
little CÑÑ), with Dan translating the highlights for Carmen. After
only two weeks of school, the big news is the teachers are on strike,
protesting the federal government's education reform program which
will have teachers take competency tests, with possible firings for
those that fail three evaluations. A big manifestación
outside the international airport in Mexico City slowed things down
there for the day. There seems to be a general willingness on the
part of citizens here to let aggrieved groups have their say with
actions like this, but it's getting to the point that parents are
becoming angry that classes are on hold.
Friday was a chilly
70 degrees. Time to have the oven on and make a lime meringue pie.
Our carpenter came by to tell us that he will be delivering the
repaired kitchen cabinet door tomorrow. He had been working on a big
job in Córdoba, but he hadn't forgotten us. The original door
warped badly after he had installed it. He was trying to straighten
it, and if that was not possible, he will have made us a new one.
Carpenters must have a hard time here, with little kiln-dried wood
available for purchase.
We barely had our
eyes open saturday morning before a woodpecker ratta-tat-tatted on a
wood en beam above the bedroom window. Up near the roof, we were
unable to actually see it. Hope he comes back sometime we're
outside, as we like to identify and tally the fauna and flora around
us here. We then enjoyed listening to the radio (classic hits on
XHSIC “La Poderosa” in Cordoba) music for awhile before the
kitties could talk us into getting up.
A flower seller
stopped at our gate. His fresh flowers are lonnnnng stemmed and so
beautiful! Today we bought a bunch containing Alstroemeria
and another of large gerber daisies . Hope they last two weeks as
the last ones we purchased from him did. Carmen put one branch of
the alstroemeria into a pot of soil – hoping to root it. We had
one of these Peruvian lilies growing in Anacortes. Dan has spent the
day pecking way at his computer on financial stuff. Carmen spent the
day with our plants. Actually sewing the straw like coconut fiber on
to the mesh form we made to hold our staghorn fern.
We have a banana
every morning for breakfast and they have gotten a bit ahead of us.
Since we had recently purchased a six hole muffin pan that nicely
fits into our toaster oven, Carmen made banana muffins for our
10:30am snack. The kitties seem tired out today, so they must have
worked hard protecting us last night. Dan had suggested that the
wine left over from dinner with Ania & Frank wednesday, be used
in cooking. The result was our mid-day meal: chicken thighs roasted
in our toaster oven, with veggies (carrots, shallots, chayote
and garlic cloves, thyme) and red wine. Many children about today.
In fact, lots of folks walking into town today. An old red pickup
truck with large cans or raw milk also drove by. It actually had a
tin cup attached to one of the milk cans. Our carpenter never
arrived, so for sure he had something pressing come up. We had
wanted to go for a walk, but did not for fear of missing him.
Tomorrow for sure a walk.