Category Archives: Rincon

Paddle Out Celebration of Life

Our new friend Tony Hicks recently died. We hadn’t known him long, but his spirit was vibrant and he was always supportive and positive. So it came as a shock to the community who knew him when we found out that he had had a heart attack while knee boarding and died shortly thereafter. Tony had written a book/ebook called the Pillars of Progress about achieving your highest potential and I truly believe he was living in his.

Bk and Tony2Britton and Tony jamming at an open mic at Dulcis Vita Coffee Shop during a Thursday Art Walk

This weekend we went to a Paddle Out celebration of his life at Domes Beach in Rincón. Paddle out ceremonies are often done for surfers and other water sport enthusiasts like Tony. It was so beautiful and a great reflection of him and we are grateful to have known him. Please keep his wife and family in your thoughts.

Board Headstone
Flowers adorn his kneeboard

Circle in the water

A group with boards paddle out to release his ashes in a circle into the water

Group on the beachWe have such a wonderful community!

Paddle Out bonfire
We enjoyed music and a bonfire as the sun set

It was one of the most beautiful send-offs I think I have ever been a part of and we will miss Tony greatly.

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Lunch at the Beach

Today we took some time off from working on the property to have lunch at the beach. I didn’t want people to think all we did was cut down trees!  We picked up some chicken and bought a few Coronas at the food shack on the beach.  We fed some of the friendly stray dogs with the leftovers.

It’s the little things.

Stella Beach
Stella Beach

Stella Beach (2)
Food Shack on the Right

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Finding Palms and Difficult Trees

Palm in Truck2
New plants ready to go once we get more cleared (plus the boss cat)

We have cleared and planted, cleared and planted and then done it some more.  I think we are at the point where we can finally start to make some sort of landscaping plan on a broader scale because we have an idea of what the property looks like.

Tree There Tree Gone

Opening up the view, one tree at a time

It would seem that the previous owner had cleared quite a bit and then those areas left unattended filled in over the years with what we are calling trash trees.  There are salsa trees that are very soft wood and attract termites, but grow extremely quick.  There are lots of what are locally called robles or ‘oak trees’ but are more specifically the tabebuia.  These trees all have to come down and be chopped up.

As we cut back we occasionally come across a tree we don’t want to cut (it’s amazing).  So far it has basically come down to a lot of mango and palm trees that we are saving.  We are still finding trees that we didn’t know existed and we are still visiting areas of the property that we haven’t been to.

For example, below is another royal palm that we didn’t know was growing until we started to carve a new path thru the forest.  It has to be around 30-35 feet tall.  Of course it didn’t look like the picture when we found it, we could actually barely see it.  We had to saw down everything around it (about 15 trees of varying size and type).


Royal palm cleared
Royal palm to greet us on our new path

I have counted 15 of these on the property and this one is one of the smaller trees!

As we cut and cut we learn more.  More about the plants, animals and I am getting pretty good at sawing down trees.  There are still challenges that come up and require more thinking and planning.  For example there were two trees near the house and cabana that we have been wanting to cut down, but for reasons of new challenges, weren’t easy.

Below is a picture of a dead mango tree that is next to the wood house.  It is a real eye sore and view blocker we call ‘the monster’.  It has a back lean, is half rotted, has no top branches, lives right next to the fence and septic pipe and also has bees living in the base.  For these reasons, it hasn’t been a straight forward removal.

Opening up the view
Dead Mango Tree Removal Process

We covered the septic pipe with some old pallets so that what was left of the branches wouldn’t crush the pipe when they fell.  This worked out well.  The tree was so close to the fence that access to the base was difficult.  Also because there were no branches on the top of the tree, it made it not want to fall (no leverage or weight) once the base was cut thru.

I had sawed thru 80% of the base, but it was still standing so we tied a rope around the top and tried to pull it over, but this didn’t work.  We just didn’t have the leverage to pull it.  So I grabbed a few ratcheting straps from the truck and tied it to the tree and a fence post.  The ability to ratchet made all the difference.

Ratcheting Straps
High Tension

This worked out and the tree came crashing down!  The bees that live in the base of the trunk will be taken care of at a later day, or maybe not.  They might be able to live there, but we will see.  They didn’t swarm out and attack so that was good.  I had my bee veil ready to go just in case.

Mango Down
Dead Mango Tree Down (coop in the background)

There was another tree behind the house that blocked the view and dropped foot long bean pods everywhere.  It was half dead and full of termites.  For these reasons we wanted to remove it but we were concerned it would crush the fence when it fell.  Well….. We decided that we are going to remove the fence so crushing it would be ok.  And maybe kind of fun.  So it came down too.

Ugly tree from deck
Tree from Deck Blocking View

Tree down from deck
Tree Down!

Fence Damage
Fence After Taking the Tree Off It

The dry season will be coming to an end and we want to cut down as much as we can and be ready to plant like crazy!  I have killed more trees than I would like to admit, and there isn’t an end in sight yet.  The property is opening up more and we can see a nice view of the valley with the ocean and the Aguadilla airport in the distance.  It is getting us excited to get going on the wood house.

We are enjoying the process of discovery and progress.  It has been an absolute blast and at the end of the day we let the chickens out and sit on the porch of the coop watching them forage around for bugs.

BK Chickens and Lappy

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A Tuesday in Our Puerto Rico Life

Today was a fairly normal Tuesday, if there is any such thing as normal yet.

We awoke around 8:30-9am, had some yummy Puerto Rican coffee and bananas and then checked on the chickens in the coop and gave them some watermelon and cantaloupe rinds. We watered the trees including about 10 more that we planted after clearing and finally being able to mow in that area.

New trees cabana and coop
New trees we planted after mowing the area

Britton wanted to clear more of the other slope in the yard with the lawn mower and proceeded to do so. Unfortunately he hit a huge rock (as well as a lot of random things such as glass bottles and padlocks) that had been apparently thrown out into the yard years ago by the previous owner and had over time become buried under leaves and trees and whatnot.

Blades already
Our week-old mower blade below and the new one above

So we had our goal for the day: to find a new blade for the (new) mower. We stopped at Rubely’s which is the closest little hardware store on our side of Rincon and where Britton gets to practice his Spanish. He always asks me what the word for whatever it is that he is looking for before going in to the store. In this case he asked me what “blade” was. I said “cuchilla” which he always gets mixed up with cochina (meaning pig or slang for dirty pig) so we laughed and repeated the correct word a couple of times. The guy at Rubely took one look at the blade and I could heard him say “piedra!” which Britton didn’t understand and he looked back at me in the truck and I yelled back “rock!” and we all laughed. Yep a big rock must have bent that blade!

But unfortunately Rubely didn’t have the right sized blade. So we went to another store and finally found it at Rincon Rental. By then we were getting pretty hungry so we went to our newest quick-food restaurant find: Pizza Land near the Plaza. We took our Strombolis and a few beers and went down to the public beach and enjoyed our lunch while watching the kite surfers in the wind.

Britton Pizza and Beach
Pizza and beer at the beach!

This is the same beach platform that I have been doing my morning yoga classes and so I took the opportunity to practice a few poses as well.

Tree pose yoga on beach
Tree pose watching the kite surfers

Later this evening we will let the chickens roam around in the yard while we are on guard for any hawks and we water the new transplants and gardens again. The chickens will then slowly load back up into the coop as the darkness descends and we will also load back up into the cabana and watch a few shows on the computer since poker night is cancelled this week for Britton. Overall, our Tuesdays have never been better and will never be the same again. And when I reflect on this day I acknowledge that I am perfectly happy with that.

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