Category Archives: Challenges

Catching Up: Baby Shower and Out and About


Boqueron for my Birthday

Life sometimes just sweeps you down the river and you hardly have a chance to pop your head up out of the water. Life events (and death) and mostly this pregnancy has taken us down all sorts of strange and stressful paths that has led us to dropping some of the balls, including keeping this blog up. While I have a moment I thought I had better at least share a few catch up photos from the last month or so.


Near Wilderness in Aguadilla


Lighthouse ruins (Ponderosa) of Aguadilla


Fun baby shower

With very nice gifts


Including a cool henna design


Friends and neighbors at the baby shower!


Henna design stain


Hiking through our jungle for the photo shoot -notice there are still a lot of down trees in this section of the property


My belly is huge! And I am nearly cooked!


Cool tropical flowers


Strange bug -longhorn beetle I saw in Aguadilla


Britton hiking our jungle


A “Survivor”-style shack on the beach someone built


I’m now in my 9th month and ready (sort of) for baby!

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Adventures in Jungle Taming: Felling a Giant Royal Palm


A Daunting Task

It’s not all planting flowers and building trails when it comes to taming our jungle. In this case, we had one of our favorite huge Royal Palm trees die of Thielaviopsis trunk rot. It’s a bummer because it was sort of the statement piece of this “room” in our botanical garden. This occurs when palms suffer some sort of trauma to their soft core such as tearing off palm fronds or wounding it in some other way. You know, the sort of thing a huge hurricane could do. After Maria all the surviving palms (the ones that didn’t get knocked over completely or bent in half like a straw), seemed to slowly come back replacing their fronds one by one. Including this one. But then a yellowing came over the spire and then the upper green trunk. The rot had been slowly and quietly eating away at the palm from the inside out. We kept thinking maybe it got struck by lightning and would grow back, but it never recovered. Finally the entire crown just fell off. If there is no crown, a palm can’t survive.

We contemplated just leaving the huge concrete-pole looking tree there, but we knew it would eventually start rotting away and pose a safety threat when it finally fell on its own, so we decided to chainsaw it down. Chainsawing is dangerous and even with a lot of experience, you can’t always predict where trees will fall. This one was a pretty scary job, and made this pregnant lady waddle away as fast a possible when the tree started coming right in my direction. Check out the video.

In the end it all worked out and we planted a new mango tree in its place. And the jungle grows on.


It smushed a mulberry tree, some bananas and heliconias, but we managed to save them


It stinks from all the rot inside!

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Bench Pressing in the Jungle Gym

Often times we say that we don’t have to go work out at a gym or own any exercise equipment because our lifestyle has it built in: our very own jungle gym (literally in the jungle). Well we recently added another piece to the gym and it was all about bench pressing!

We saw some concrete benches at a shop and we loved them because they will last much longer than the metal ones that start corroding/rusting in the rain right away. We got a backless bench for one area, and then decided we would like one with a back. Now that I am carrying more weight (lifting weights) with me everywhere I go (including on the property), I have found I need more places to sit. Plus it just makes the property even more park-like.

Small bench near the tropical gardens


The larger bench (in pieces) we put near the bridge was super heavy and we had to flatten the ground to make it work


But fits right in


Enjoying the new bench

Before we had the bench we just put a chair on the pad as you can see in this walk with Kitty through the jungle. The bench is much better!

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Post-Maria Trauma

The view off the cabin deck right after the hurricane

As we move into 2018’s Hurricane Season, I am reminded of how much the hurricane rocked our world. Every facet of life was disrupted for months on end. The simplest of things -drinking water, showering, turning on the lights, keeping food cold, finding food- turned into huge monumental treasure hunting tasks. The emotional toll was high, but when you’re living in the moment, you’re just trying to survive. And survive, we did. But the scars remain.

Now that we have a little time behind us and a second to catch our breath, I now see that there will probably always be moments that bring back memories and jar us back to that very crazy time. Someone called this Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and it’s probably not too far from the truth. It was a traumatic time, and in some ways still continues to be. Here are a few of the “triggers” of our post-Maria trauma. Some you might expect and others catch us off guard.

Violent Rainstorms/Wind – After a long dry spell, we had a huge driving rain storm that was eerily reminiscent of Maria. It immediately brought back memories of solar lights, collecting rain water and just the sheer fear of the moment.
Canned Food/Junk Food – When I go into a gas station, now I see the “food” differently. All the Slim Jims, canned weiners, Chef Boyardee, chips, candy and water bottles make me think of hurricane rations as we called them. It was the worst I have ever eaten in my life. But at least I ate. I still have a hard time with tuna sandwiches even when I spice them up with fresh celery, lettuce and pickles because we ate them so much during this period.
Power, Internet, Cell and Water Outages – Unfortunately this is still a fairly common problem. And it was even before Maria. The truth of the matter is that Puerto Rico’s infrastructure is in rough shape and needs some serious help, but the money is not there. Maria only worsened it. A nearby water dam (Guajataca) was severely damaged and caused rolling water outages for some time. Some cell towers are still only partially functional. Because of this, whenever the power goes out and the fans stop spinning we think, “how long?” and “should we get the generator out?”
Downed trees/Road Blockages -Some power poles are still leaning precariously or fall, a tree branch falls or we will see a landslide block the road and we are instantly taken back to the time when we couldn’t even drive on the roads at all.
Out of Gas/Ice – This doesn’t happen too often anymore, but occasionally you’ll go in to get a bag of ice or fill up the car and they don’t have gas or they don’t have a certain type of gas (premium/regular) and it brings me right back to the hurricane days. There was an apagon of power a couple of months ago when a worker took out the power to most of the island in a single swoop and no one knew how long it would be out again. There was a massive run to the gas station and kilometer-long waits once again.
Blue Rooves –These are reminders of all that was taken from people. People who were left on the street, sometimes literally after the storm drove them out of their homes. It is still somewhat surreal to see buildings in such disrepair.


People in Home Depot learning about solar

Like active combat soldiers, we also have a camaraderie with anyone who also went through the hurricane and the aftermath. Especially the aftermath because that was not just a test of strength but of endurance. We went 2 months without water or electricity and that was short in comparison with others on the island (in some very rural mountain areas they still don’t)! We went even longer without internet or steady supplies of fresh food. I sometimes can’t believe we endured and never left! It was very tempting when our mental health had been degraded and we couldn’t even shower or eat properly.

But those of us who went through it have a sort of short-hand when we look at each other. When we answer “yes” to “Were you here through Maria?” the biases and walls fall and we all know what that means. What the struggle is/was. We were in it together and that makes us a tribe regardless of our backgrounds. We know that we all had to help each other to get through that. For people who didn’t live through that battlefield, you just simply can’t fathom the extent that this affected every aspect of life. Puerto Rico se levanta. Nos levantaremos.  Puerto Rico rises up. We will lift ourselves up. That was the mantra. And we will. We must. We are.


View off the deck of the cabin now

We just hope this hurricane season will be kind to us. Please, don’t send us into battle again!

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