Category Archives: Food

Selling our Garden Bounty

One thing we love to do in Colorado and that we are excited to try in Puerto Rico, is growing things and selling them. I sell our chicken eggs to a friend year round and I have some other people who like to buy them from time to time in the summer months when we get 5-6 eggs a day (or almost 3 dozen a week!). But when all of our plants start coming in, we also like to sell those, or the fruits from them.


At the Greeley Farmer’s Market a few years back (Selling tropical plants, but of course!)

We used to sell some of our plants at the Greeley Farmer’s Market, but now they require all sorts of expensive insurance and crap, so small backyard growers like us have been pushed out. But there is one great marketplace still around: Craigslist! We love Craigslist and use it to buy things we may need and we list our rentals as well as things around our house and from our garden and greenhouse.


One of our comfrey plants


Tomatoes and lots of other plants in the greenhouse this year


We are finishing up with the strawberry season at our house, but had a bumper crop this year!

Just tonight we sold some tomato plants that were overtaking our greenhouse floor. We also have some people interested in buying some of our comfrey plant crowns. We love doing it. I like writing up the descriptions and waiting for people to contact me. Britton is good at digging up plants and making them look good. Selling our garden bounty feels more like fun than work! We would be working in the garden anyway and so when we get paid to do it and we see how happy people are with our plants, it makes us all the more pleased.

For instance, the woman who bought our plants tonight had had all of hers torn apart when we had that hail storm a few days ago, so she was super excited to be able to start her tomato garden up again -and for way less than it would be to replace them with plants from Home Depot or a nursery.

Britton says lately he has been having dreams of planting an acre or so of our land in Rincon with rows of pepper plants. I am not sure how well peppers grow there, but I would imagine fairly good. And in Rincon, we would still be able to sell them -and eggs, palm trees, coconuts, mangoes, etc, etc- at the Farmer’s Market! There’s so much opportunity everywhere you look. We are really excited and summers in Colorado make us all the more ready to live a summer-lifestyle year-round.


At the Rincon Farmer’s Market

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Black Hollow Lake

A couple of weeks ago our friends Matt and Jamie invited us to hang out at a private lake called Black Hollow where they rent a spot for their RV. We had a great time with them and their family. It was peaceful and nice to be out in nature even if it was still a bit chilly.

Black Hollow is located a little ways past Ault, so we left Greeley the back way and ran into some horses in the road! I guess it’s not just Puerto Rico where you’ll see horses roaming about.


Horses in the road on the way out

When we got there it was practically just our group there!


Black Hollow


Nice country setting


Matt and Jamie’s daughter Hailee took us for a walk around the area (and took this photo)


We also took a ride in the pedal/paddle boat. Silly girl! 🙂

I loved the pedal boat and would think it would be great to have something like that in Puerto Rico. Are there pedal boats for the ocean?


Pedaling on the pedalboat

After our walks and exploration, we had a light dinner and then lit a small bonfire.


Bonfire!

As we stood by the fire, we watched as they tried to reel in some fish as the sun set. Apparently, the next day they hooked some pretty big fish.


An idyllic country scene

It was a great day-outing!

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How to Make Microwave Popcorn with a Paper Bag

Britton and I try to eat pretty healthfully. I definitely have a sweet tooth and he has a salty tooth (if there is such a thing), but overall we try to watch what we eat. His family has a propensity toward diabetes, and my family has a history of cancer. My dad, his brother (my uncle) and his dad (my grandfather) all died of cancer at early ages.

So I try to avoid anything that has been linked to cancer -such as tobacco products, processed meats like hot dogs, even colas (the caramel coloring). All of these are known “junk” trash foods, but I recently read a report that said the perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in lining of the microwave popcorn bags could cause all sorts of things from infertility to cancer.  I have come to believe that any sort of American food, fast food, convenience food -and their packaging!- is suspect.

Anyhow, I looked into how I could still eat popcorn and just not eat the prepackaged chemical-ridden microwave popcorn anymore. I found that you can very easily do it yourself with just a brown paper bag. Britton didn’t believe me. He said there was a reason they sold microwave popcorn in the little bags or else everyone would just do it themselves. So, we decided to try it out ourselves. We had a little bet between ourselves. Guess who won? 🙂 Check it out!

 

Yep, it worked! Britton was shocked when we first heard the pops. And it tasted great. Just like air-popped popcorn. It didn’t have any of the fake butter flavor. You can add whatever you want to it or just eat it plain. As I mentioned in the video, popcorn is a great food. Just not the convenience microwave bags that are sold. Popcorn is a whole grain full of fiber. It’s a great snack because just a little food poofs up to quite a bit making it seem like you are eating more than you really are.  Me encantan las palomitas!

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Colorado Bucket/To-Do List Before Moving to Puerto Rico

We have started to talk about what we need and want to do here in Colorado before we move to Puerto Rico. I think of moving to Puerto Rico sort of like graduating from school and moving on to the next thing in life. And of course before graduation there is usually a checklist of things to get done first.  So here are a few that we have started to put into motion. I am sure there will be more that we do or think of but this is a start:


Curvy mountainous roads

1. Climb a 14er. If you haven’t ever heard of the term “fourteener” you probably aren’t from Colorado. Everyone here knows that a 14er is a mountain that is over 14,000 feet high. Colorado has the most mountains over 14,000 feet so there are a lot to choose from as you can tell from this list. We are thinking Mt. Bierstadt as it is a beginner mountain and can be done in about 6 hours (3 hours up the mountain and 3 hours down). And it is also fairly close -about 2 1/2 hour drive from Greeley. We’ve done most other things in Colorado that it’s known for including skiing, snowshoeing, snowboarding, sledding, hiking, bicycling, white river rafting,camping, etc but we haven’t yet been to the summit of a 14er. It’s a must and will take some training to do.


Pretty mountains in Estes Park, Colorado

2. Visit my dad’s gravesite in Meeker, Colorado. My dad decided he wanted to be buried in his hometown of Meeker, Colorado which is about 6-7 hours away by car. My mom went to see him buried, but the rest of have not yet seen his final resting place. We were waiting on the headstone to arrive before we went there, and so it should be there by now. We are hoping to time this trip with the peach harvest in Palisades and Grand Junction and have a little fun while we are there too.

3. Begin moving our rental properties to a management company. We had been waiting on this one because a management company charges about 10%, but now that we have a few whose leases are coming due (or people who want to break them), we think this would be a good time to transfer management over. There is no way we will be able to manage the day-to-day things especially if there is turnover when we are living in Puerto Rico. This year with a management company will give us a good idea of how it will work (or what we need to tweak) when we are away. Plus it should save us some stress having some help with them.

4. Stand at the four corners. I would like to go down south to the only place where four American state lines intersect. These states are: Colorado, Utah, New Mexico and Arizona. Then we could say we were in 4 places at once!  On this trip I would also like to see Mesa Verde, the Garden of the Gods, and other southern Colorado attractions that I either haven’t seen or it has been a long while.

5. Visit/walk around every park in Greeley. Greeley is a park city. The city planners definitely did a good job with the parks as you would be hard pressed to live in a neighborhood that doesn’t have a park. When we first moved to our house, we were in that minority, and then they built “our” park, Ramseier Farm Park which is just about 1 block outside our little subdivision. We have visited most parks in Greeley, but Britton said he found a list with some that we hadn’t even noticed!

6. Throw a big going-away party. Yah, we’re already thinking about the party- well parties plural because we want to have a house-warming party in PR too once we get things fixed up and furnished.


Taken from the tower at The Dam Store near Devil’s Backbone

These are some of the big ones that we want to do in the next 500 days or so. Obviously there are a lot of small day-to-day things that will need to be taken care of like selling everything, packing, making arrangements for the animals (who’s going and who’s staying?), etc. But can you think of anything else we definitely should do before we leave Greeley, or Colorado or our current lifestyle?

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