Category Archives: Rincon

Power Down

Power was out all day yesterday 6am-10pm.  This also means that the water is out because they use pumping stations to get the water up the hills and to the houses.  It isn’t uncommon to have the power out, but it usually comes back on within an hour or so.  Many of the houses here have water tanks on the roofs and generators; we don’t.

When the power is out to the neighborhood we can hear the generators humming in the background.  It makes me wonder what they’re powering in the middle of the day?  Almost all the stoves here are gas and a fridge will hold its cold like a cooler for hours on end if not a day if you don’t open it.  Are they watching TV?  Running an air conditioner?  I can only speculate.

For us we still have water that flows in the pipes because we live at the bottom of the hill.  We both had enough to take cold, quick showers (lower pressure), watered all the plants and even filled our swimming pool but we eventually ran dry.

BK Pool
Enjoying a cold popsicle before it melts while dipping my toes in the pool

We found out that we became more ingenuitive.  We were using the pool water to fill the chicken and turkey waterers, we were using battery power on the laptop to watch TV and movies, used fire to cook and even caught rain from the sky to drink.  Eventually we realized that we really don’t have to do anything or be anywhere so we slept…a lot.  It was a power down for us too.

Later that night we went for a drive to meet up with a friend and saw that the whole town was without power.  Stores were closed, places were dark.  Signs everywhere “No hay luz”.  People were playing dominoes under the city building lights that obviously had a backup generator, there were people at the beach sitting around drinking in the dark.  I suppose these folks also realized they didn’t have to be anywhere either and there wasn’t a way to force that to change.

So it also becomes a practice in patience and not having control.  We noticed it aroused a lot of anxiety in some people too, especially when the repairs were ‘supposed to be done at 4pm’ and the lights were still out and there was no internet to tell us what to do! When people are out of power, some feel out of control, powerless!

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The light of the moon seems brighter when there is no other light

Not having these basic services makes me reflect upon how dependent/independent I am on services and how dependent society as a whole is upon them.  We were dependent upon it because of the food we keep in the fridge, yet independent because we can pick some fruit, kill a chicken or iguana and eat it fresh on a fire with no need for electricity if we needed to.  We use city water but can catch it from the sky.  It sparked conversations about consumerism, survivalism and humanity.  As consumers we look to buy gadgets to fix things we perceive as a problem like buying a generator or tanks to hold water.  As homesteaders we try to look to ourselves and resources on hand to satisfy those needs and purchasing as a last resort.  The realization is that independence is both essential and impossible at this stage in time.

For now things are back online in Rincón. Electricity, water, internet and even the trash trucks are doing their thing.  I think it is a good thing to go without services every once in a while.

 

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Use Your Outside Voice

You know when you were a kid running around like crazy and getting into all kinds of adventures (aka trouble) and making lots of noise and laughing a lot?

Justin and Me
My brother and I as kids

Then, some adult, usually your parent or teacher would say, “Calm down and use your inside voice”.

And then, slowly and strangely, somewhere down the line, we become the adult?

Yah, well, sorry but we’re changing back. Britton and I have had a complete revolution from our life as adults and are turning back into kids again. It wasn’t exactly a calculated decision. It just sort of happened. Kind of like becoming adults. We have just sort of become kids again.

We spend so much time now just living and playing and laughing at all our mistakes and the strangeness of life again that it was bound to happen. We are outdoors so much more and are doing so many things that kids would do, we sometimes have to remind ourselves that there are still people who have to wake up at a prescribed time, stay in the lines, keep doors shut, wear clothes (or shoes), have schedules and clocks, and act “normal”.

We don’t anymore.

We now have extra time for whatever. The first things that start to come back when you return to being a kid again are creative pursuits like art, music and games.

Cassie and GuitarLearning to play the guitar

I have heard that a good guide for where you should orient yourself in setting your life’s path/purpose  is to ask yourself what you loved to do as a kid. A kid of around 10-12, when you knew a little bit about your choices and preferences, but you still just knew how to have fun and not take things so seriously. Give it a try and see what you come up with and how it aligns with your life now.

When I was a kid I LOVED summertime, swimming and animals. If I could have designed my life when I was about 10 years old it would have been a constant summer of swimming, playing with friends, reading, drawing, learning new things and having lots and lots of animals.

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Now: Lotsa turkeys!

When Britton was a kid he had a BB gun, went swimming daily in the summers, messed around with technical gadgets, played guitar and bass, played outside with friends and enjoyed video games.

Sounds pretty close! We’ve added in a few other interests, but basically…our lives have come full circle back to being kids again. Kids with a few more responsibilities, but a kid’s life none-the-less.

Still, sometimes we get caught in our old, adult-like ways. For instance, talking at a relatively normal indoor  volume. When we are outside we are often busy with something: turkeys or chickens, pulling weeds, watering plants, sawing down trees, making trails, etc. And so if we talk normally to one another and are on two sides of the yard, we can’t hear each other and so we end up saying it multiple times. So now, we remind each other to “use your outside voice!”

Just today we took a long walk around the property. With four acres of jungle, this is not a quick or easy task. It took us about 2 1/2 hours to hike around and clear some trails.

Almond tree
On a huge upturned tropical almond tree in the bottom of the quebrada of the property

We have many large mango trees all over the jungle and so we are going to call it mango tree trail.

Mango magic tree
Mango tree at the base of the quebrada that would make a great treehouse or campfire area (when dry)

It is pretty amazing, actually, that we haven’t even really seen half the property. But it makes it fun too…every kid loves doing some exploring. And we always find cool stuff.

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Not sure what plant this is but it was growing on top of another plant

Shell Ginger
There is a huge shell ginger plant that is growing from the front gate area all the way down the slope
Peach tree
The peach tree has even flowered!

It has been such a kick to be a kid in a grown-up’s body. Sure there are those pesky responsibilities that we didn’t have as kids, but there are also all those resources we didn’t have then too. And don’t forget the things that you wanted and weren’t allowed as kids, we now CAN have and do as adults. It’s the best of both worlds, really.

And I don’t mind saying that loudly.

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Life’s Twists and Turns and a Tropical Treehouse

The last few weeks have had an interesting theme.  That theme apparently is my old neighborhood friends.  Last week my friend Matt came out to buy a place of his own in Rincón.  We grew up just across the street from each and have been friends since I moved there in 3rd grade.  We have a lot in common and now we also have Rincón in common!

IMG_5235Hanging out at Matt and Jamie’s in Atalya

Another good friend of mine, Logan who lived just up the street has also moved to Puerto Rico and lives in Fajardo!  He moved to the island about a month before we did!  He came over to the west side of the island over the weekend to visit us and Rincón!  They stayed in the hooch tropical treehouses.  It is a pretty cool place with trails cut thru the jungle and lots of bamboo growing.  It was a cool backdrop or scene as if out of a movie to see an old friend.

BK CK Logan Karin
Britton, Cassie, Logan and Karin

The bamboo hooches are pretty cool.  We were all pretty impressed by their construction and the jungle area that surrounds them.  The owners have put a lot of work into the area and it shows.

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One of the Hooches

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Bamboo Growing

It would seem that pretty soon the whole neighborhood will be here.  How unusual is it that we all came to a place that we hadn’t ever heard of?  Maybe it is a function of us living in CO and not having the tropical experience?  Maybe there is some kind of cosmic connection?  Not sure but seeing everyone here in the span of a week makes me wonder.

 

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Chumming the Fish

The other day a friend of mine had an open spot on a fishing boat charter and asked if I wanted to go.  I figured that I should take him up on it as I hadn’t ever done it before.  A new experience would be fun and I know virtually nothing about ocean fishing.  The boat was a 35 foot 500hp Contender, which also piqued my interest.  I told them I’d go and we met up at 6am a few days later.

Contender
Fishing Boat for the Day

I brought a few burritos and drank my coffee and we waited for the other guys to show up.  They told me that we were going to be using live bait.  Meant nothing to me when they said it.

We left the marina and the water was super clear.  We ended up going off to catch the live bait.  The live bait, or sardines are caught with a drop net off the boat.  It is also possible to catch these off the shore and now I know what those guys with nets are doing on the shore.  Getting sardines.

Sardines
Filling the Bait Boxes with Sardines

Once the bait wells were filled with sardines we set out for a destination several miles off shore called the hump.  The hump is the top of an underwater mountain that comes up to about 90 feet under the surface at its height.  When we got out there the water was a super dark blue color unlike I’ve seen before.

Desecheo
View of Desecheo from The Hump

We sat in the water and cast hooks baited with live sardines.  We weren’t getting much, if any action.  The boat rocked and I think once we stopped I started to get a little queasy from the waves but kept waiting for a bite.  The captain decided that we should move to another spot, so we reeled in and he started the motors.  Once the boat started to move my queasiness vanished.

The boat moved pretty fast at ~30 knots across the surface and the view of Puerto Rico from the water was super cool.

Horned Dorset from sea
Horned Dorset

Land and sea
Land and Sea

We stopped just north of Domes.  The boat started to do its rocking thing as we cast our bait out into the water again.  Now I have flown in small planes quite a bit and haven’t experienced any kind of motion sickness, but the rocking did eventually get to me and I upchucked over the side of the boat.  I figure this was just more chum to attract the fish right?  I kept my pole in the water and did get a fish on the line shortly after.  I had a good fight but eventually the fish cut the line and I was left with nothing.

Our friend Tommy did manage to catch a good sized black fin.  I haven’t ever seen a fish like this before.  I was kind of shocked and now understand ocean fishing a lot more.  When I first took off I didn’t honestly know what to expect, at all.  The whole experience was new to me.

black fin tuna
Big Tuna

We had a bonfire down at our house later that night and Tommy prepared sashimi that was…absolutely…..delicious.  I haven’t ever had fish that fresh.  I think I will definitely go fishing again only the next time I think I will have my sea legs as well as a better understanding of how it works and a better chance of reeling in something.

Sushi!
Huge Plate of Sashimi

Moonlight bonfire
Moonlight Fire

We sat around the fire and sang songs while eating some great food!  It turned out to be an amazing day, one that I will remember for a long time.

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