Category Archives: Tropical

Our First Guests

We have had our first guests to the finca (farm) since moving here. They are my mom and her boyfriend Anthony!

Mom and Anthony

 

We really aren’t well-suited for guests yet since we only have one functional bathroom and the wooden house is not really ready to sleep in since it still feels sort of like a haunted house without electricity in some of the rooms.

Hammocks

 

But since the weather is always so nice sleeping outside is ever an option -even in the middle of January. Britton and Anthony literally hung out and slept in the hammocks while my mom and I took the cabana.

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Britton said he may not go back to bed-sleeping because he enjoyed the hammock so much! It has been so nice showing our first guests around and having them here, and hopefully on their next visit we will have more conventional sleeping quarters, but the hammocks are always available! 馃檪

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Stop Looking for Stop Lights

I used to commute about 45聽miles to聽work.聽 Every day I would drive on the hi-way and interstate to and from work.聽聽When聽one drives this much a lot of thoughts聽go thru your head and I聽used to get annoyed at stop lights.聽 I’d have to stop, waste time and聽they were always increasing in numbers.聽 They slowed me down for an ETERNITY聽and there聽were new stoplights at intersections that didn’t聽previously have them, which were more chances of having to slow down.聽聽 How much of my life was I spending at red lights?!? I made a game out of trying to not get stopped at lights.聽 Time them right, take a little different route, etc.聽 I was actively seeking out the red lights, so that I could avoid them.

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Who controls our happiness?

One day Cassie had suggested that I聽try it a different way.聽 I agreed and decided that I would look for how many green lights I went thru.聽 Same drive, same route only a different perspective.聽 It was amazing how many green lights I found.聽 My perspective changed and it was kind of amazing how the frequency of red stoplights changed as well as well as how long they appeared to last.聽 I found so many green lights, and it made me happy to see them.聽 Instead of seeking out frustrating things that would ultimately annoy me when I got to them, I sought out something that kept my cruise going and saved me time.聽 Every green light was a win. Even our language filters our perspective. So instead of聽stop lights, they were now “go lights”.

This changed my commute.聽 It was amazing how many green lights I saw and how few red lights stopped me, or rather, that I stopped for.聽 When I did get stopped at a red light, it became a lot less frustrating because the ratio of green to red made it seem ok.聽 6 green lights to 1 red light….Not so bad, especially compared to the “OMG stupid red light slowing me down!!!” thought process I had been using.

I had listened to an NPR series of broadcasts on one of those commutes back in Colorado.聽 The stories titled “Puerto Rico:聽A Disenchanted Island” focused on high crime, corruption, murder, high unemployment, politics聽and people moving to other states to “escape their island woes”.聽 When I listened to this I didn’t identify with it.聽 It didn’t seem like the PR that we had visited so many times.

I didn’t really think much about it until just the other day.聽 We had visited our friends in Maricao and I had mentioned that I don’t know how “Puerto Ricans can afford these nice cars and continually shop at the malls, where in the US the malls are vacant and dead”.聽 They’re jobless after all right?聽 And things here are so dire! 聽It was brought up that the stats the US uses on the economy simply aren’t accurate.聽 There is a lot of economic activity that doesn’t show up on the stats the US government uses.聽 There is a large informal economy here.

When I listened to the NPR broadcast I didn’t even really think much about it at the time, but the perspective used was first of all, from the perspective of the news.聽 The news is simply there to create a listening audience and they do this by reporting information people tune into.聽 Turn on any news broadcast at any time and you will see proof of this.聽 “If it bleeds it leads”.聽聽 The reporting also聽comes from the perspective of the US.聽 Having lived in the mainland for so long there are a few simple ideas that are always taken for granted.聽 Money is success, jobs are聽good and not working for the man聽either means you’re lazy and worthless or that the economy controls your fate (or if you do it long enough you’re put out to pasture/retired).

I suppose I choose to聽see things differently, not that any of those things are true or聽false, good or bad. 聽As an example I lived in a city with high poverty rates and the gangs, drugs and shootings were often reported in the local newspaper.聽 I however, didn’t personally聽encounter any problems with it…ever.聽 When I stopped focusing on the news, my city became a more pleasant place to live.聽 Beautiful parks, lots of places to eat and good friends to see movies with.

I guess this is basically another way of聽asking the age old glass half full/empty question.

perspective
It depends on your perspective

The point is that there are red stoplights.聽 I don’t have to focus on them and I don’t have to abide by the general idea that they are good or bad.聽 I can choose which glasses to wear.聽 For example I could see the red lights as a life saving measure for society instead of an inconvenience to ME and MY daily commute; 聽it is a choice.聽 Dirty dishes in the sink are either聽a continuous chore that never ceases, or a sign of having food to eat. Sometimes it is hard to try on different perspectives: almost as difficult it seems as learning a foreign language. But it is possible and the world opens up and becomes a whole new place full of more possibilities.

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Yesterday we were burning piles of dried trees and vines that we had cut down a few weeks ago.聽 We stopped a few times throughout the day for beer breaks and lunch then got back to it.聽 We watched the hawks floating in the air like kites. At dinner time we were both pretty wiped out so we took showers and I took a shovel down to the smoldering pile and got a few scoops of hot coals so I could cook chicken for dinner.聽 The air was incredibly perfect at 80 degrees and I am in only shorts and flip flops, the property is looking better than ever and we have lots of fruit trees planted.

Is it the life we have built and decided to live or we are unemployed and the conditions are dire?聽Do we have a crazy untamed property or just enough work to keep us motivated?聽Do we live in the sweltering humid聽tropics or are we聽not freezing our butts off in聽a temperate desert?聽 It all depends on which glasses you want to put on.

Even this post will be construed differently by everyone who reads it because we all have different perspectives, different life experiences, different opinions. And that’s what makes聽reality ever聽harder to REALLY聽pin down.聽It’s different for everyone.

But doesn’t it seem just a聽little fitting that聽there are no stoplights at all in Rinc贸n? 馃檪

 

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Celebrating the New Year in Maricao, PR

This year we rang in the new year in a small agricultural town in Puerto Rico called Maricao. Maricao is mostly known for its coffee production, cooler temperatures (about 10-15 degrees cooler than lowlands) and slower pace of life.

Waking up
View from the mountains of Maricao where we stayed

However, while it is considered a very rural community, they are well-known for their New Year’s Eve celebration. The mayor’s office hires a live band, has a fireworks show and used to even have a pig roast in years past. Rinc贸n doesn’t even do this and it is about 2-3 times the population (about 15,000 people)聽as Maricao (around 6,000). We thought it sounded like a great time when our new friends invited us to come to the fiesta and then stay the night at their 100-acre finca. And indeed it was.

Band in Maricao

We had a lot of fun dancing to the merengue and salsa music, eating a great meal and ringing in the New Year 3 hours earlier than we did last year.

Fireworks

Our gracious hosts then showed us around the farm in the morning and we admired all the beautiful tropical plants. We also noticed that while Maricao is only about 20 miles away as the crow flies from Rinc贸n, it is actually quite a bit different when it comes to vegetation because of the climate differences. It really was quite a bit colder than in Rinc贸n. Britton and I both had to snuggle under two quilts to stay warm! Maybe we are just getting acclimated, but it was the first time in Puerto Rico that we were聽a聽bit chilled.

Heliconia
Beautiful plants like this heliconia

It was also our first night away from our property in Rinc贸n and it was fun to get away for a night. Seeing what a mature finca with 10+ year’s worth of growth looks like also reinvigorated all our efforts around the property. Plus thanks to our hosts, We went home with more starts to plant. What a great start to 2014. We hope you all have a Prospero A帽o Nuevo聽con mucha felicidad.

Gracias por visitar a Maricao

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Rinc贸n Behind the Scenes

On three sides of the peninsula “corner” of Rinc贸n the sea beckons. While it is always there, it can often be ignored when “real life” pulls you into all the various activities that modern folks do. Stops at the bank, the grocery store, the restaurant. Only here in Rinc贸n, 100 feet away you might smell sea air and hear the waves crashing.

The other day we were doing some errands around downtown Rinc贸n and we saw an alley that led from the storefront to the beach. The trashcans behind the grocery store lead to unexpectedly beautiful beach scenes. So we took a little detour and found a quiet cove with just a couple of fishermen on the beach.

Fisherman and desecheo

We walked up the beach a ways and found that it ended near saw a small wooden house. We walked up around it to see if we could get back on the beach and found a hidden聽neighborhood on the creek that feeds into the sea.

Creek behind beach

There were open air wooden houses and barely stable聽bridges across the ditch.

Britton on Bridge

It reminded me of why we love it here so much. While there has been a lot of modern “progress” in the last few years, Rinc贸n and Puerto Rico in general still retain so much of its rawness and authenticity. Here were basically shacks with beachfront sunset views. When would that ever happen in more “developed” areas?

Open Air HouseOpen air Swiss-family Robinson style

The small town unchartered feel is still here. Even when we are doing the most modern mundane chores we are reminded of this. We can still get lost in town and follow trails and turns into the unknown like Alice down the rabbit hole. We find adventures behind the scenes.

 

 

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