Category Archives: Puerto Rico Property

Cool Sights: Golden Basilica, Lightning Show and a Gecko with Chrysalis

We have seen some interesting and strange sights lately, but they are all sort of random. So, rather than making a separate post for each one, I thought I would just share the photos of them in this post.

The first sight was of a golden domed building off in the distance as we were driving to the nursery in Cabo Rojo. I asked Britton to go off track and so we checked it out.

Basilica small

It turned out that it was called Basilica Menor: Nuestra Señora de la Monserrate in Homigueros, Puerto Rico. We climbed the numerous steps to the top and looked out over the city and beyond. It was a beautiful little detour.

Jesus Hormigueros

The next cool sight was an awesome lightning show over Aguadilla bay one  night. I probably snapped about 100 photos before getting the timing right for this one.

Lightning
Lightning show

And finally, we were walking around checking on all the plants when I noticed a big green worm on the underside of a papaya leaf. We fed it to a turkey who had fun running around with it like it was a football. Then we looked under some other leaves and saw this fluffy chrysalis. We weren’t the only one to be interested in it. One of our ever-present gecko friends was checking it out as well.

Gecko and crysalis small
Gecko lizard and Chrysalis

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Our Biggest Find…So Far.

The other day we bought some new trees while we were out and about.  We have been in the habit of finding free plant sources thru friends and have had multiple truck loads full, but when you dig up sprouts and hijos you are somewhat limited to what varieties are available.  For instance bananas, plantains, ginger, heliconia some spreading ground covers are fairly abundant but citrus and other fruiting trees usually are harder to find.  We came across some Buddha’s hand, kumquats, tangerines and various other harder to find stuff at one of the plant stores and of course we don’t have anywhere cleared to plant them!

The areas we have planted with trees we have actually had to go back and rearrange.  We have found that a lot of the varieties of trees we bought grow to enormous sizes so we decided we put them too close and in an area that will one day block the view unless they hare heavily pruned.  Moving forward we will take that into account, but when we first arrived we were just excited to plant the trees as soon as we had cleared enough area to do so.

We haven’t cleared/cleaned up even 1/4 of the property yet.  A lot of it is still wildly overgrown.  When the forest gets tall, all the trees start to compete to stay at the top of the canopy.  This causes trees to grow very tall and slender with a huge bush at the top.  We have cut down a lot of trees shaped like this that are nearest to the house because they just block out the entire view of the ocean and Aguadilla.

So anyway, we started to clear out another area of the forest and we came across this:

Avocado reach
Pulling Off Vines

We learned a lesson in our biggest mistake and so we didn’t saw this avocado tree down..lol.  The avocado tree we cut down in that post is, as commenters posted, growing back.  It is however going to be a long while before that tree will have avocados again.   This new find has lots of nice big fruits on it and we have started to pick them up off the ground as they fall.  It is amazing that we have walked by this area quite a few times and haven’t ever noticed the tree!  It is just a testament to how over grown the property is after 20 years.  Hopefully we continue to find mature fruit producing trees.  It is fun to have our own sources for food.

Avocados up aboveAvocados Getting Ready to Drop

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The Tortoise and the Pear

Here’s a little story about two new life forms in our little slice of jungle.

The first one was the “pear”. For the longest time we had never quite figured out what type of mystery fruit one of the trees up front was bearing. Whenever we would pick one of the kiwi looking fruits, it would start weeping lots of latex white sap. We tasted it and it was very astringent/bitter and super sticky.

What fruit

What in the world could it be? We recently started noticing a few of the fruits on the ground had been chewed on, we assume, by rats. So we looked in the tree and found that some of the fruits were actually soft! We picked some of them and cut them open.

Sapodilla nispero

They had about 3 shiny black seeds in each little fruit.  They smelled very sweet and no longer had the bitter taste or white sap leaking from them. I tasted it and the first thing I thought was that it tasted like a brown-sugar flavored pear. The skin was soft enough to eat and like a pear it had a sort of grainy, sandy quality to it. I was so excited about my find that I took a few slices down to Britton where he was chopping down some weedy trees. When he tasted it, he also exclaimed that this was probably our favorite “exotic” or new-to-us fruit we had ever tasted.

So I looked it up because we had heard from various visitors on the property (anyone and everyone, what type of tree is this??!) that it could be a mamey, a sapote or a nispero. I searched and searched and finally found what I believe it is. A manilkara zapota, commonly called sapodilla or nispero in Puerto Rico! Yum. Now we just have to figure out how to harvest them when they are ripe enough to pick, but not so ripe that the birds and rats eat them first.

turkeys and turtle

Our second find of the jungle recently was a big surprise! We were working down below in the quebrada (gulley). The turkeys were of course with us, as they always are when we are outside. I heard them making their bubble sounds which mean that they have found something they don’t understand but that it isn’t something dangerous to them. I looked where they were beeping and found…a beautiful turtle!

Tortoise

I was so happy about finding the turtle (well, ok, the turkeys found it) that I again had to yell and show Britton. We both enjoyed looking at and holding him.

Cassie and Turtle

I am still not exactly sure what type it is but I think I have narrowed it down to an Eastern Box Turtle. I didn’t even know that Puerto Rico had wild land turtles! So cool! I hope we see him and his family down in the quebrada again.

We live in such a magical place. We absolutely love it.

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Careful! What You Bring Into Your Life Has Consequences

Be careful of what you bring into your life.

BK in HD
One of many trips to Home Depot for “stuff”

This is yet another motto we try to remember especially as we have traversed this new life in Puerto Rico. Often times I think people just sort of slide into the lives they have and all of the belongings that they acquire. Everyone else has this or that, so I should too, we may say to ourselves. When we began sorting through all of our things in Greeley, it was incredible how much we had acquired over the 10 years we lived there. And we thought we were somewhat conscientious of our “stuff”.

Our “stuff” is a sort of parallel, a perspective that allows us to see what we value. You may think that a TV is just a TV but it also reflects your interests. TV shows, video games, movies, etc. Each object has an inherent use or meaning behind it. Sometimes those are obvious like the TV or a kitchen table, or a bed or washing machine, and sometimes those objects carry a sentimental or non-functional use, or a “future use” which is something that you think maybe down the line will be useful.

I have a hard time with that one because I am a future thinker. I love to imagine things down the line and I like to have a variety of resources available to me later. The problem with this is when it doesn’t actually come down the line. Then it is just junk cluttering up your space.

Living in a 300 sq foot studio cabana made us double think the importance of various objects. For example, a bed was crucial. It acts not only as a place to sleep but also as a couch for watching shows on the laptop. And since it is also in the middle of our living area, it is the main component of the room. Therefore we wanted it to look nice as well.

New Bed
Our bed and central living space

The American mentality is often to just buy (or get) anything and everything. The more stuff, the better, right? Not so much when you consider the true cost behind each object. If it is something that you truly value (and by that I would say, something you use or think about at least weekly), then it is probably important enough in your life. But sometimes we bring things into our lives without truly considering the impact they will have.

Everything we have has an inherent trade involved. If you have a washing machine (like we do), you have the convenience of not having to wash laundry by hand, but you have traded space for this thing that will, at some point, break and either need to be replaced or fixed. Britton traded sawing down trees by hand for a chainsaw. But the inherent trade was higher levels of danger, ongoing maintenance, gasoline, blades and the potential to take down a lot more trees than desired. Even the bed that seems so obvious a choice had trades with it. We must clean the linens, and dust the frame and sweep under it. It takes up a lot of space (a lot more than hammocks would have for instance).

These trades are not just in large purchases like a washer or chainsaw or bed, but in all the small things as well. If you buy disposable water bottles, you are trading your money for something that brings convenience but contributes to the waste stream of harmful plastics and drives up the cost of something so basic and primal as water. If you buy or find a knick-knack, it will take up space in your life. You will need to dust it and keep it clean (or replace batteries depending on the object). And WHERE and HOW you buy your stuff also matters. Buying locally keeps the money in the local economy and more directly helps people than big corporations, but it may be more expensive. Buying online or in big box stores may be “cheaper” but far more expensive in many other regards.


If you haven’t seen the Story of Stuff, it is a must!

The point is that every item in our life has many reverberating consequences that we may not have thought about before bringing them into our life. Sometimes we may bring something in and then realize that it wasn’t necessary or was actually causing too many other issues associated that we didn’t think about beforehand.  So we need to dispose of it. Well, that means work. You either need to sell the objects or find someone to take them off your hands. Suddenly this thing that meant so much to you (or cost so much in terms of money) is now not worth much at all when you no longer need it. Your “stuff” has turned into “crap” as the wonderful George Carlin so astutely noted. We found this was the case when we moved as well. All of a sudden things we had paid $100 for would only bring $10-20 on Craigslist or a garage sale. Our precious stuff wasn’t so precious after all.


George Carlin nails it!

If you buy too much stuff this way (buy high and sell low), you are spinning your wheels. What is worse than spinning your wheels though, is to PAY to have your stuff held for you -such as in a storage container or buying a big house. This is when you know that your stuff has taken WAY too much of your life energy and the trade is far too steep.

Britton and Flamboyan small
We took our time finding this flamboyán a home (thanks Fran and Steve)

We have spun our wheels a little bit with the trees we have planted here. They are so small when they come from the nursery, but have the future potential to grow super tall. When we arrived we were so excited about planting that we would plant something in the first area that had been cleared out. Now that we have cleared more, we realize that many of them are planted too closely together and need to be transplanted. I remember learning from one of my very favorite and prescient bosses that there is a difference between activity and achievement. Just because you are running around frantically doesn’t mean that anything is actually getting done. Spinning your wheels.

I was talking with Britton the other day about our year anniversary in Puerto Rico. I said, congratulations on not doing anything major on the wood house this year. He looked at me like I was crazy. Of course we should have done more on the house, of course we should have a nice larger space to live in, he must have been thinking. But NOT doing something in this situation was actually a larger achievement than doing it.

Why? Well, it meant that we were being thoughtful and careful about what we truly wanted. We were not spinning our wheels and regretting rash or quick decisions. We took our time cutting down trees. We didn’t get our chickens or turkeys until we had taken care of our basic needs because we knew they would add another chore or element to our lives that we would have to take into consideration. With this amount of time we have been able to meet more people and understand our options even more. We have been able to see if the budget we had anticipated would work out (it has). If we had jumped in too fast it would have been chaotic and a lot more wheel spinning.

We are still working on this motto. It is so tempting to just go out and buy something. Especially at the first hint that something could be “easier” if we did. If you rationally break it down and list out the pros and cons, though, you may find that some things just don’t make sense in your situation but would make a lot of sense if you had been dealt different cards.

For instance, we had the opportunity to get a 400 gallon water cistern from a friend who was generously selling it for about half what you would buy it in the store. We were initially very excited about this great deal. As we thought about it more, however, we weren’t sure where to put it or what to do with it. Especially when our housing infrastructure hasn’t been completed. Would we use it as a backup for city water? Well, that’s not really necessary since we have at least 400 gallons backed up in the pipes and have always had water whenever the water has gone out. Would we use it as a rainwater catchment system to water plants? Well, our water bills have been so low (about as low as you can get) that cost of the tank and the cleaning of the tank (clorine tabs, time) and the space it would take up didn’t make sense either. Would we like to be completely off grid on rainwater only? If so, we would need a lot more tanks than just one and we would also need a lot more space to store them as well as some sort of filtration system and water purification system if it was to be potable.

Basically, we did the calculations. And the calculations kept coming back that we just really didn’t need the tank! At least not at this point in time. Being careful or mindful of the “stuff” in your life is sort of like being mindful of your food. It is easy to get careless and sloppy and just eat or buy whatever some company is marketing to you, but to be mindful means to actually think it through the long term. Down the line, will this move me forward in the direction I want to go or will I be spinning my wheels (or even going backwards)?

Our stuff has a deep emotional and ancient survival component to it as well which sometimes makes it harder to let go, but remembering to be mindful about what you bring into your life in the first place will help to filter out a lot of the “junk” or “crap” (now or later). The less stuff you have to think about the freer you can be.

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