Category Archives: Puerto Rico Property

One Week’s Progress

It is hard to believe it has been one week since we arrived. I think we are still sort of in the vacation mentality since most of our trips here have been work trips too. Plus we still have the rental car and we really need to start the search for a vehicle.

We have been doing things a little bit differently this time, however. We have gone into this knowing that we will be LIVING here and not just visiting. That means trying to eat in as much as possible, making ourselves more comfortable and “at home” and incorporating with the community, going to events and things whenever we can.

On the home front, we don’t really have any way to eat hot food, so a lot of our food has been straight out of the can or cold foods like salad and fruit.
What we eat

After a few days of that, we finally broke down and just bought a rice cooker for our first warm meal. We also bought a coffee maker so we could drink the delicious Puerto Rican coffee each morning.

Appliances

When we have been here before in our vacation mindset we ate out a lot more, so it was good to start feeling comfortable eating at home.

But the big project of the week, besides the ongoing yard work, was making the cabana more comfortable to live in generally. In order to do that, it was very apparent that we needed to paint the ceiling that was constantly flaking down on our heads and making our feet white with paint specks. Also one of the green walls was really flaking off too, so we decided to do that wall as well.

Ceiling 2

Comparison Paint Prep 2 Paint Prep Cassie Paint Prep1 Painting 2 Painting-1

It took us over three days to do this job because it is tough to live in a construction site, so we did half the room and then we moved everything to the other side of the room and did that side. I think the final results turned out great!

Ceiling After

After everything dried, we put up a ceiling fan so that Britton wouldn’t need to use the box fan. He gets a lot hotter than I do, and needs something to help cool him down especially if he is working in the yard in the sun.

BK cooling down
Britton with the box fan and a bag of ice cubes

Next up will be to finally take our clothes out of the suitcases. Then we will be feeling even more like we are living here and not just visiting.

On the Kitty front…he is making progress too! I think he is starting to feel a little more at home as well. He has even started to peek out the doors!
Kitty and flipflops

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Guess What I Found?!

“Guess what I found?” has been our newest game. It is kind of like the chance card on Monopoly. This could be something beneficial or not so much.

For instance, one of our first “guess what I found” moments was when I found the passionfruit flowers and fruit. Then another one was finding this creepy centipede in the palm trees.

Centipede

We have heard that Puerto Rico has no venomous snakes or spiders, but that you do have to watch out for these guys! Also, the ants are intense! Tiny little ants that feel like someone just threw a bunch of needles at your feet. We have been having a hard time feeding Kitty because only about 5 minutes after we set his food down the ants swarm his dish like a petri dish. And if you try to move it they start biting you! We are definitely going to have to find a solution for that!

As for Kitty himself, he spends almost his entire day as a lump under the covers of the bed.

Lump in the bed

He’s lump, he’s lump, he’s lump, he’s in our bed.

Kitty is definitely still freaked out. He comes out for a couple of hours a day, but if he hears the leaves rustle or any loud sound, he scurries back under the covers to hide. I took him out with me up on top of the cabana just to show him that there really is nothing to be afraid of, but I don’t think he believed me.

Kitty and Cassie
Kitty and me under the big mango tree

We are still doing quite a bit of work on the landscaping and have finally been able to drive the car into the courtyard after clearing away some massive weed trees that grew about three inches thick in just those past nine months. Britton bought a bow saw (thanks Matt for the recommendation) and hacked those things down.

BK and the sierra

I am bringing out a lot of Spanish vocabulary I haven’t had to use much in an office setting. Saw=Sierra, Wire=Alambre, Piedra de afilar= Sharpening stone, etc. Good practice using Spanish in our new daily life when we say “guess what I found” in the hardware stores.

A lot of you are worried we are working too much. Don’t worry. We also know how to play! We have gotten out and met some people too. We visited a few friends and played a little poker. We are planning on going to a concert event in Aguadilla this Saturday and we have taken lots of naps and eaten lots of “guest-what-I-found” delicious fruits from our property, the Econo or Edwards Grocery Stores or from the fruit vendors parked on the side of the road.

Quenepas
Not sure what these are…quenepas? They are from the property but mostly a huge seed inside

We have had a couple of other “guess what I found” moments. Britton was up on the top of the cabana with the laptop to transfer some pictures. He yelled down to me, “guess what I found?!” and I yelled back, “Um, cat poop?” and we laughed because apparently the roof of the cabana had been used by the local cats as a poop hot spot…but it turned out to be an ACTUAL hot spot. We found open WIFI on our roof! So great! I am standing here on top of the roof overlooking the wooden house and ocean writing this!

The not-so-great thing is what we did NOT find in our bags….our camera battery charger. I think we left it plugged into the wall in our kitchen in Greeley! Ugh. Once our battery runs out we won’t be able to take more pictures or videos, so we are going on a quest to try and find one (Mom if you read this can you check in our Greeley house?).

So daily we have little wins and little challenges. It has been the perfect balance. We still have a few things we need to sort out like the zafacones for the Rincon trash pick up are apparently all out, so we have to haul out any trash we make.

All in all, every day has been an adventure with new finds around every corner.

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Getting Settled

We are starting to get settled in. Everywhere we look, though, there is more to do! It is hard to prioritize everything we need to do. Should we weedwack the front drive in or scrape the ceilings so the paint stops flaking on our heads as we are sleeping? Or should we get a dresser so we can take our clothes out of the suitcases? Or should we just hang out at the beach?

What’s great is that we can choose how much we want to do and we can rest when we want. Britton likes to wake up earlier than me. Yesterday he cut himself a path to the starfruit tree and the passionfruit vines and we ate that for breakfast. Pretty cool.


Starfruit cut

Starfruit AKA carambola from our yard

Inside of passionfruit
Passionfruit AKA parcha from our yard

white bird

We also saw this cool white bird hanging out eating lizards. Such a strange creature with that super long neck!

We went to the Home Depot to pick up a few of those needed things. Our friends are so great, they gave us some gift certificates there and they were very helpful! We picked up a ceiling fan, a bookshelf, some tools, trashcan (zafacon! a new word for Britton to learn), paint and supplies, a chironja tree (orange grapefruit cross) and other stuff to help get us started.

Cassie in HD
In Home Depot of Mayaguez

Then this morning we kept at the jungle trimming including taking down some of the dead palm fronds from the coconut palms and the traveler’s palm.

Traveler Palm Seed bunch BK
This is an old heart of palm that weighed about 30 lbs!

Travelers Palm seeds
Such an alien world to us!

We had fun working outside with our Colorado lungs we weren’t even breathing hard, but we sure were sweating a lot! 

And after working in the yard, the local beer, Medalla Light, with limes was the perfect thirst quencher sitting on the roof of the cabana under the shade of the mango tree.

Medalla and Lime

When it gets dark we settle in and watch a show on the laptop or clean up the inside of the cabana a little. It has rained a little bit and the coqui frogs and insects turn the quiet jungle into an orchestra. I had a dream last night that all the sounds of the jungle were actually a salsa band with little insect trumpet players.

House at night with vines

So, we are slowly getting settled in. We are still in need of a vehicle (we have a rental right now) and we haven’t even started on the wood house at all, but I think we are moving at a good pace. We are really enjoying this new life. I would definitely say we are jubilados! 

 

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Questions and Comments about our Move to Puerto Rico

We are now down to less than two weeks to take off and live the life we’ve been working toward for many years. People are very intrigued with what we are about to do because it is not the norm. We have been asked lots and lots of questions and received some interesting comments about how and why we are moving to Puerto Rico. The below are a few of them along with our responses.

Beach and Palm

Why are you leaving? And why Puerto Rico?
For short conversations in which we have just a few moments to boil it down, we say simply: a lifestyle change. For longer conversations we talk about all the reasons that led us to Puerto Rico, as I have written here.  In essence we basically say we have never lived anywhere other than Colorado so we want to experience a new climate, area and culture. We want to have new adventures and life experiences. For three quick reasons about how Puerto Rico fits us in particular I say: 1) Puerto Rico is a tropical island 2) It is Spanish and English speaking 3) It is part of the U.S. but distinct culturally.

Invariably, the next questions make me laugh a little inside.

So, when are you moving to Costa Rica?
Ok, I get it. Puerto Rico and Costa Rica kind of sound the same with the whole Rico/Rica thing. But come on! They are two entirely different places. There are some similarities, just as there are some similarities of America and Australia including that they both begin and end with the letter “A” but they are very distinct and different places. For a quick geography lesson, Costa Rica is in Central America. Puerto Rico is an island in the Caribbean. Oh and we are moving on September 23!

West Indies

Similarly, we hear:
I bet it’s going to be hard to leave the U.S.
Again, this just shows most Americans’ complete lack of understanding of geography of even American territory. Puerto Rico is part of the U.S. It is considered a commonwealth or a “free associated state”. It is still much more “foreign” than I assume moving to Idaho or Illinois would be, but it really is still American soil.

It may very well be difficult to adjust, but that discomfort is part of the reason we are doing it. Comfort only keeps you comfortable. That is not where memories and good stories are made (or blog fodder! 🙂 ). We are completely ready to try out this new lifestyle. We are soooo excited actually.

Will you have jobs there? What will you do?
This is one of the most common questions we get. No. We are leaving our paid jobs in Colorado and moving there job-free. We may, or may not, get traditional “jobs” there.

We are challenging the notion of “jobs” just as we challenge the concept of “retirement“. Jobs, in our world, will be whatever we decide to do that day.

It may entail fixing up the cabana or wood house -like painting, remodeling kitchens and bathrooms, building a deck and new roof, hiring contractors, removing killer bees and rats and bats from the walls. It may involve gardening and farming activities -clearing the ground, planting food crops like pineapples, avocado trees, banana trees, citrus trees, dragon fruit, peppers, squash, cucumbers, tomatoes, etc or raising animals like chickens, goats, bees or even ostriches. Our “job” may be to rent out space on our property in the cabana or maybe even in a treehouse. Our job may be to take food to the farmer’s markets around or just park our truck on the side of the road and sell stuff. Our job on some days may be to just play in the ocean, swimming, paddleboarding, surfing, snorkeling, diving, fishing, boating. Our job on some other days may be to set up a computer server or teach English or Spanish or volunteer for some of the various great causes. Or it could be to just go to a party or throw one!

Basically, our job will be to create daily the life we love to live!

House Palms and Ocean

Wow, you’re lucky!
We love to hear this one. It feels good to think of yourself as a “lucky” person. And there are some aspects of luck to this. We lucked out being born to our great, supportive families. We lucked out finding each other. We lucked out having a nice, steady career. We lucked out in finding our specific property in Rincon. And we appreciate so much all of these and other great random chance things.

But really, this isn’t about luck. We didn’t just randomly stumble upon this life we are living. We have chosen very carefully all along the way. We have jumped upon and taken advantage of the random, lucky shots we have been given. In our garden of life, we have nurtured the aspects we wanted to grow bigger and weeded out the parts we didn’t. We didn’t win the lottery or get any sort of inheritance money or property. We did this, are doing this, because we had the goal to do it! We have never let go of the end goal even when sometimes it was tough going. With determination and persistance, much more than luck, we have helped to cultivate our life the way we want to live it. We firmly believe the life you are in right this instant, for better or worse, is the one you ultimately created.

Oh, I couldn’t do this. You’re much braver than me. (Or) You can only do this because you don’t have kids.
Now, I think this is more of a reflection on the people that say this than on the ability to actually do this. They haven’t probably worked the dream-to-reality manifestation muscle in a while or they are so ingrained with what is currently in their lives they think it is actually holding them back. The truth is, the only thing holding you back from whatever you want to create is: YOU!

Having kids can certainly change your choices because you now have someone besides yourself to look after and think after, but people live all over the world in all sorts of circumstances with kids! Why are you limiting yourself? If we had kids we would still be doing this. In fact, I would love to raise a kid in this type of environment where anything is possible instead of the standard game. If you have a dream, go after it! After all, isn’t this what we want to teach our kids? And the best way for them to learn this is from our example. Don’t let kids, or jobs, or health insurance or whatever block you have hold you back from getting out there and playing in this crazy game of life. These are convenient excuses and nothing more. Make a plan. Get buy-in from the other players. Work towards it. But do it! Give it a go! We always say, what’s the worse that can happen? We come back and get jobs and do it all again. But at least we dreamed and we did it! You CAN too!

 

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