Category Archives: Colorado Daily Life

Keeping Our Eyes on the Prize

We have come a long way. When we began writing this blog five years ago (five years!), we had no idea how to write a blog (the very first posts are pretty bad, lol) and we had only a vague idea of when we were moving to Puerto Rico. We had a contract to buy a finca with 25 acres in the jungled outskirts of Lares, Puerto Rico and were just waiting for the paperwork to clear, a mortgage to come through, and ideas for income sources when we moved to appear.

100_2845
At the first property we tried to buy

We thought, perhaps, within that year.

But things changed; the title work didn’t come through cleanly. The mortgage companies said it was non-comforming and in general it just sort of fell apart. In the mean time, we kept working and living in Colorado and as we thought about it we became more and more drawn toward the west side and the ocean. We looked and looked for properties and visited PR various times. We even put in another offer/contract on a place in Isabela/San Sebastain, before we finally found and bought our little slice of paradise in Rincon, Puerto Rico.

From other side
The Prize! 🙂

Now, we are finally on the verge of the big jump. We have worked out the kinks. In just about 100 days, we will have left all that we know -our friends, family, jobs, home- and will begin our new life, from scratch.

Now that we are in the home stretch, we have to close down our life in Greeley, Colorado. I am finding that this is much like attempting to unravel all the various roots and ties we have here. And they run much deeper and tangled than I initially thought.

We are still selling nearly everything we have. This has been a much more emotional task than we thought when we started. Everything we keep in our lives has some sort of reason for being there. Sometimes they are very superficial, and other times, they have huge sentimental and identity attachments, like Britton’s Corvette or my jewelry armoire that was a gift from BK.

We are also trying to detach from opportunities and work we have here. While we have to remain somewhat present to our current lives, we also have to know that we just can’t get too wrapped up in the latest and greatest new event. As it turned out, at my work, one of the grant programs (a cardiovascular health disparities program) that I coordinated just happened to end too. We had a nice celebration to acknowledge all the work we had done over the last two years on this program.

Ama Tu Vida crew
There’s going to be lots of goodbyes

We are also going through our to-do lists. Like doctors’ visits, vet visits, making accounts paperless, arranging places for our too-sentimental-to-sell, too-bulky-to-bring stuff, checking off our Colorado bucket list (and occasionally adding to it). We are planning our going-away party. I also had some information to share with Greeley chicken enthusiasts who want to know what the chicken laws are, so I finally wrote a page here about the rules for chickens in Greeley that I had been meaning to write for some time.

americana chickens

Sometimes we still get so busy in our day-to-day chores we forget what we are moving towards! It’s important to keep our eyes on the prize, but we also can’t be so forward looking that we miss what we are doing right now. This life-changing stuff has been a good practice for a lot of things. Mostly of balance and of letting go.

Letting go of our egos. Letting go of our stuff. Letting go of money and comfort and jobs. Letting go of our identities (somewhat). Letting go, moving on and making space for something new entirely. Sometimes we get profound insights on why we are doing this and other times we break down (probably mostly out of fear) and start having alternate reality fantasies of what our life would be if we just stayed in Colorado. And, of course, we know that it would be good and fine, because we love our life, but it would be, well, the same game. Rinse and repeat.

We have played the game here in Colorado. We have played the heck out of it! We are really good players. We have won this game. It’s time to collect that prize and start playing a new game. Watch out, world. Here we come.

BK and Cass2

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Summer in the Rocky Mountains

One thing we will miss when we move to Puerto Rico is summer in Colorado and the ability to go to the Rocky Mountains in less than one hour from our house in Greeley.

Nice Mountain Shot
In the Colorado Rocky Mountains this weekend

This weekend we went to a wedding of our good friends Shana and Rick in Estes Park, Colorado. We took my old ’89 Oldsmobile car because Britton’s ’98 Honda is less reliable than my car to make it up the steep grade (as we found out last year). The Corvette used to be the best car to take up the mountains because it has the most horsepower and torque of any of the three, but since he has sold it, we were left with the Honda or Olds choices. My car did ok, but it had a major miss and we had to stop various times on the way up and down the mountain.

Shana Rick Photo Op

The wedding was at beautiful Mary’s Lake Lodge in Estes on a bright, sunny, if a little windy of a day. We then enjoyed spending time with our friends at the reception.

Me Jody and Shana Me and B in Estes Park

Afterward, we walked around Estes a bit and hiked a small while at the edge of Rocky Mountain National Park.

Pine Cone close Pretty Estes Sharp rockies Me and B by a river

It is such a gorgeous place. Estes Park is interesting because unlike other Colorado mountain cities, the only attraction is the beauty of the place as opposed to ski lifts and the like.

Yellow wildflower field and devils backbone
Wildflowers and Devil’s Backbone
On the way down the slope we topped off the great day with a stop at Devil’s Backbone in Loveland for a quick hike.

Cloudy backbone

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Summer Living

I love summer living. Here in Colorado that lasts about 3-4 months or from about early to mid June until about early to mid September. During that time life explodes with a flurry of activities and growth (and fires, unfortunately).

During this season there are so many great things to it. One of my favorites is eating our backyard bounty outside on the evenings and weekends.

Strawberries and eggs
Strawberries and eggs from out back

Britton and I have a phrase for what that will looks like year-round when we are living the laid back tropical daily life of Puerto Rico: Every day will be a Saturday in summer. And if that’s the case, it’s going to be awesome!

Eating outside
Yum and Fun. Eating outside

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Puerto Rico Training AKA Spanish Class

As part of my Puerto Rico training and to get ready for our move, I started taking a conversational Spanish class at Aims Community College here in Greeley.  It is 2 days a week and will be a good step in preparation for Puerto Rico.  While I have gotten by in PR without knowing much, it will come in handy.  In PR, most people know at least a little English, but Spanish is by far the preferred language. Cassie being fluent is a good crutch, but after seeing how much easier it is to get by for her I figure I should try as much as I can to learn before we move so I am not as dependent on her.

spanishwords

When my friend Matt and I went into Home Depot in Mayaguez, I needed to get crossco roof coating for the cabana.  I didn’t even know the word for roof, so it made it difficult to communicate.  It’s ‘techo’ by the way.

Britton Spanish

I know quite a bit of vocabulary just by living with Cassie, but I don’t know much of the basic structure of sentences. When people ask if I speak Spanish I still have to say “solamente un poco” or only a little.  I haven’t ever had the formal foundation so kids’ Spanish books and texts have helped. Like the Perico book I worked with this winter.

Perico

 

Cassie tries to help me learn these things at home but it’s different when you are held more accountable in a formal classroom setting. Plus work does education reimbursement so I should take advantage while I can. It’s a win-win! I already feel like I am getting a better grasp on the language and I am excited to use what I learn in “real-life”!

Wish me “buena suerte”! 🙂

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