Category Archives: Puerto Rico Property

Tropical Garden Test Bed

The baby chicks have been delayed about a week, so we have a little more time to clear out some more trees and get started on the chicken coop. We have also started our first small garden test bed to see how growing vegetables in the tropics will compare with growing them in the more northerly climate of Colorado.

Water Hose
During the “dry” (relative) season we have to do some watering of the plants

In Colorado you really can’t comfortably start gardening until after Memorial Day, the end of May. The main factor that delays it? Fear of frost killing off the plants. Here in tropical Puerto Rico, that is not a factor at all.

So what else could be a factor in growing vegetables here? Well, some plants such as tulips require a cooling period in order to stir them to grow, so you wouldn’t want to attempt to grow those. Other plants like head lettuces just prefer cooler weather or they will bolt too quickly or just not grow at all. And still others, like large tomatoes will split open if they have too much water. Some plants need longer light cycles than the nearly even photoperiods here. And some plants don’t like much humidity.

We know from the fruit stands and agricultural stores that some garden vegetables must grow pretty well here like: okra, peppers, eggplant, cherry tomatoes, pigeon peas, cucumbers, watermelon, yard long beans.

IMG_5056Britton digging to put in a small raised garden

But even with these common vegetables we know very little about when to plant them, and most local seed packets offer little advice. Do we plant in the slightly longer but much wetter days of summer or the dry slightly shorter days of winter? Do we need to have a cover or cloth over the bed to keep off the torrential downpours and the intense midday sun? How long is a growing season for these annuals?

And then there are all the other plants that may do well in Puerto Rico, especially if they are bred for tropical environments.

All of these are big questions for us. In Colorado we were self-proclaimed Lazy Gardeners meaning that we liked to grow things that were fairly easy to grow. If they needed a lot of attention, they often didn’t receive it and died. Working full-time jobs, we just didn’t have the time to spend babying them. But we found through a lot of trial and error that in our area of Colorado, lettuce, strawberries, cherry tomatoes, squash, asparagus and fruit trees quite literally just grew themselves and all we had to do was pick them.

IMG_5064
Very tiny garden (lower portion) in comparison to the rest of the property

So here we are in the trial and error phase gardening in Puerto Rico (and in other aspects of life as well). We want to grow things that we 1) would like to eat and 2) that grow easily and without much fuss. If it is something we really love to eat then we might put a little more time and energy into it, but overall, our gardening will have to be pretty hands off. The orchard of fruit trees may prove to fit that bill more clearly, but we want to at least give some veggies a shot too.

This is not only a consideration for plants, but other areas of our life too. For instance, one of the reasons we love bees and chickens is for this very characteristic. They are relatively maintenance free and provide many benefits to the overall holistic picture of self-sustaining food production.

So in our first efforts we dug up a small 8’x’4′ space, mixed in some local compost, and threw in some seeds. If this garden test bed works out well, we plan on having more scattered throughout the property.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (4)
  • Awesome (2)
  • Interesting (9)
  • Useful (4)
  • Bummer (1)
  • Whoa (2)

End of the Deck Bathroom

Today we accomplished a big step that we had begun over a month ago: remove the bathroom from the outdoor deck. This was a little tougher than the first part because Britton did the rest all by himself!

As it was coming down (over a month ago) it looked like this:

IMG_4686

They removed the majority of the structure that day (roof, walls, doorway, window, tub, toilet, sink), but left the floor, support beams, and base structure. So over the last few days Britton has been popping out floor boards and planning how to take down the rest of the huge beams.

Popping Boards
Popping boards

Britton head IMG_5063

Today he finished with the floor and was to the point of actually taking down the final main support posts.

Nearly downAlmost there!

That was easier said than done because these support beams were huge and covered in barbed wire! But finally he managed to release them and now the whole thing is down!

Cleared view
By the evening it was gone!
We still have to process all the wood and separate the good pieces from the bad, take out the nails and get ready for its new life. Every end is a new beginning as they say and the timing for the end of this coop is not by chance. Our new little chicks will be arriving next week and the bathroom will soon transform into the chicken coop (we’ve been jokingly referring to it as the Poop Coop in reference to its past as a bathroom -haha). Thanks to my mom’s advice we are also going to use the bathtub as the baby chick home until they are big enough to go outside on their own. We’ve also ordered baby turkey chicks, but they won’t arrive until April so we have some time yet for them.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (2)
  • Awesome (3)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

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.

IMG_4981

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! 🙂

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (3)
  • Awesome (6)
  • Interesting (0)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Step by Step

Kitty steps

Step by step we have been transforming the property. Like most properties in Puerto Rico, ours has some steep and therefore slick spots when it rains. So we thought it might be a good idea to have a few steps to help us in our daily walks checking on the plants, especially after I had fallen on my butt a few times. Britton used some of the old lumber as well as some tree trunks from our clearing as steps and paths. Add park ranger to the long growing list of job titles around here.

Steps down

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (0)
  • Awesome (1)
  • Interesting (2)
  • Useful (1)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)