Wow! (or as spelled out in spanish
“¡Guau!”), how time flies (como vuela el tiempo)!
It's been almost two months since we last posted here. No problems
or issues, or too much of note, we're just enjoying life, reading,
jigsaw-puzzling, some TV most nights, and keeping up with the flowers
in the yard. It's typical summer weather here, with warm days and
very frequent evening showers, that rainfall taking care of a lot of
keeping the plants in the yard irrigated, except for those on the
porch and under the roof overhangs.
One monday in
mid-July, taking advantage of the timing of a 4pm IMSS appointment in
Veracruz, we arranged to drive down early in the morning, taking our
neighbor Carolyn along with us. She had been wanting to show us one
of her favorite beaches there. Our previous trips to the big port
city had us in the downtown area, so some time on the beach sounded
great. We managed a good part of the day on Playa Mocambo, in the
adjacent city of Boca del Rio, south of the port, From our shaded
spot on the shore (we're not looking to burn) one can see far around
south, past the river mouth, to the point where the navy school is
located. The port area is not visible from here, as that vista is
only available from around the point to the north. Carmen had packed
a light lunch of sandwiches, so we didn't even have to wander off the
playa for snacks or partake of fare from the occasional
vendors trudging by. Keep in mind this was a non-weekend day, before
school was let out for the month long summer vacation, so parking was
no problem (in the lot of the waterpark just up the strand), and the
beach was not crowded. The water temp was great, with minimal wave
action just right for floating on one's back—a relaxing time.
We left Carolyn
under a rented-for-the-day (MX$30) umbrella station (table, chairs)
on the beach, got to the clinic in time for the cita, and
afterwards had time for a great Carl Jr's burger next to where we
parked. Then back to the Plaza America mall (across the coastal
highway from Mocambo) where we connected with Carolyn in the food
court. She just loves to mall browse. Aside from a few routing
mistakes, caused by not having a detailed city map and street construction
changing things up a bit, it was a good day. We got back home just
after dark, the last few miles on the new lanes of the autopista
in the rain (no visible lane edge markings yet, and a steep drop
where the shoulder had not yet been graded) causing just a bit of
white-knuckling. Dan hates driving at night, so we make every effort
to plan our trips to avoid it—if we had avoided the transit
misdirects in Veracruz we could have been home an hour earlier.
We celebrated Dan's
birthday with a restaurant outing in Córdoba. A few days before we
took the time to do a walking tour of the area we think of as the
restaurant area of the city. We dropped into six or seven eating
establishments serving a variety of cuisines (italian, argentine,
brazilian,japanese, etc), viewed menus, prices and ambiance, and
decided for this occasion we'd visit the Villa Franca, a new
restaurant specializing in “Mediterranean” meals. It was a good
choice, after we moved our party (the two of us plus Ania &
Frank) from the open area in front (too much street noise) to farther
back but next to an inner courtyard window.
Items in open
hanging areas and on shelves tends to get dusty, but one has to be
careful if closing-in spaces or covering them, because mildew is
always lurking. So the new bath cabinet has louvered doors. The
shelves and unenclosed “closet” spaces where our clothes live
have been great for reducing chances for mildew on the fabrics, but
even so Carmen hangs them all out in the sunshine every so often to
keep them fresh. Closing off that end of the bedroom with louvered
doors was considered, but that would have been a big, pricey, job and
the doors would always be in the way. So for the master bedroom we
found some pull-up “cortinas romanas” made of bamboo slats at
Walmart, a type of shade normally used outdoors on a porch. Even
this much of enclosure will keep the air a bit stagnant around the
clothes, so we will only use these shades some of the time. Pulled
up, they are completely out of the way.
Of course they
didn't exactly fit the spaces, so both sides had
to be trimmed off with shears and hacksaw, and the bracket slots recreated in the new ends. That got the widths correct, without having to change the cording mechanisms. We elected to hang these so that there was about 8” of space above the shade (where air can easily exit, yet above the sight-line so the hanging clothes aren't visible), and a similar amount at the floor, where our shoes get stashed (again, this is good for keeping them dry and mildew-free).
to be trimmed off with shears and hacksaw, and the bracket slots recreated in the new ends. That got the widths correct, without having to change the cording mechanisms. We elected to hang these so that there was about 8” of space above the shade (where air can easily exit, yet above the sight-line so the hanging clothes aren't visible), and a similar amount at the floor, where our shoes get stashed (again, this is good for keeping them dry and mildew-free).
We have had
building-related activity on all three sides of us. Actually, as I
write this, there is a crew cleaning out the undergrowth and pulling
down bedraggled and brown leaves from the banana field to the north,
so some activity interesting to us has taken place in all four
directions. After Valentin, in the single-story house to the west,
moved away, the landlord came by with a crew to touch up all the
exterior painting, reseal most of the roof, and put it new rain
scuppers there. So far, no new tenants into this small house, and
the landlord comes by de vez en cuando to keep the garden
looking nice. Beyond that house, there is a vacant lot, overgrown
and rampantly green for all the
while we have been here, that has now be cleaned out, possibly to be sold?
while we have been here, that has now be cleaned out, possibly to be sold?
To the east, the
corner double-wide lot across the street has been rising fast. The
regular crew seems to consist of six or seven happy guys. After the
concrete walls went up, about a week of work erecting temporary posts
and plywood floor forms, topped with a maze of rebar (varilla)
and lastly a bunch of orange flexible electrical conduit and junction
boxes tacked to the forms. We expected a pumper and concrete truck
(from Veracruz port, the closest ready-mix plant) would be the next
step.
Not so. This past
saturday trucks delivered huge piles of sand, gravel and then a
hundred or so bags of cement, these last stacked against the walls of
the church to the north. A crew of 35 men swarmed over the area,
making concrete in two large towable mixers, with others carrying it
in partly-filled 5-gal buckets (cubetas) to the wall, others
standing on a mid-wall height scaffold and hoisting the buckets to
the floor level where others would run it over the rebar-covered
floor to dump it for the guys placing and vibrating the mix into
place. There were enough guys on the crew that a couple would be
free to rest for brief periods. By the end of the afternoon all the
work was done. Amazing!
Next door to the
south, the house (used to be an office for a social-services
organization, empty since the end of the year) has been sold to a
local newly-married couple, Jorge & Carla. This is Jorge's
second marriage, as also living with them is his daughter and his
granddaughter (nieta). We have only met Jorge so far. This
building, as an office, was only finished on the ground floor, with
open-to-sky partial brick walls on the unfinished second story.
There is now a crew of three albañiles working to complete the
construction (with also some paint and finish work downstairs), which
will consist of pouring posts between the old freestanding brick
upper walls, then beams and eventually a sloping slab concrete roof.
It will be good to have this building made weather-proof, as the
rain-soaked brickwork has been wicking moisture into our contiguous
wall.
A couple of new blooms have pleased us. First, our night-blooming cereus had three buds that we had thought were new branching stems, but as they developed we discovered they would be flowers. Unfortunately they got to just that point where we were checking every night to see if they had opened when they suddenly died back. Turns out we had let the pot get too dry. We are now taking more care and we have gotten another burst of seven flower buds. Since this plant blooms earlier in the year, perhaps this is because the first flowers failed to mature. How far will these get, and will any of them then form into pitahaya (“dragon fruit”). (Dan bought a huge pitahaya at the grocery store and enjoyed it's succulence. Carmen used a bit of it as a garnish on a melon-jicama pineaple-yogurt-dressed salad one day that Frank & Ania visited us for lunch.). The Stapelia gigantea (carrion plant) just keeps pushing out huge blooms that the house flies just love to visit.
The Stanhopea occulata (Torito, Two-Eyes Stanhopea) we have had for the longest time in a coir lined wire-basket hanging near the from gate, pushed out a bloom stalk thru the bottom of the basket. The large native orchids didn;t last very long but were beautiful, with a fragrance of mint-chocolate. We took the time one day when the car was out to visit the floricultura center north of town and but several plants we have been wanting. This include a Cycas revoluta (sago palm), a native Zamia furfuracea (cardboard palm) and an Adenium obesum (desert/karoo rose), plus another hibiscus to replace the one we lost.
Currently, the open storage wall in the mid-sized front guest room also is getting an enclosing “treatment,” vertical curtains. The fabric Carmen is using is actually plant shading cloth, so it is very strong, weatherproof and yet allows air to pass thru it. Aside from some problems with the sewing machine, which have been resolved, this project is almost done.
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