Tag Archives: homesteading in Mexico

Roof Project 2023

Almost exactly a year after the last roof project was completed, we managed to scrimp and save enough to get the final third-floor room roof finished. Unfortunately, the intersection between money and time coincided with Mexican Independence Day celebrations, so we had to delay roof-building gratification until the Monday following said festivities.

There was the issue of a rather large swarm of bees that had taken up residence in the chimney. My husband has tried to smoke them out on more than one occasion, to no avail. To avoid angry bees during the tromping up and down while the roof was being poured, we covered the entrance with a blue blanket. It wasn’t foolproof, but it did keep most of the stinging insects contained.

Bruce, Fred, and George were tied in the back by the pool bright and early so that the coladores (roofers) could do their stuff and get the ramp set up. That took nearly no time at all, and so most were sitting around waiting for the materials to arrive. Two enterprising guys went exploring and came back with nopales (cactus) on a stick from up the hill. They requested a knife and cut the spiney bits off–CACTUS FOR DINNER BABY! One of the two also brought his slingshot in case a rabbit, squirrel, or bird presented itself. 

My son was tired even before starting. As his fear of heights prevented him from ascending the ramp to the third floor, he was the water boy as usual–bringing buckets and buckets of water to the cement mixers from the pool. 

The materials arrived a bit late; it being the Monday after all the Independence fun, several of the workers at the ferretería failed to arrive for their shift. A phone call and run into town got things moving, and the roofing activities finally commenced.

Since this is only a smallish room, half the size of the room below it, even with the late start, they were done by noon. The haze finally cleared away, and the workers sat beneath our jacaranda trees in front of the house, which Cocoa and Bear did not approve of.

Around 1, the circus moved on. All that was left was a bit of tapping to solidify the cement setting, and it was finished–the last roof. 

The wood guy, though, has been a pain this time around. He wasn’t the same guy we usually rent the framing wood from, and this guy wanted half up front. Ok. Then, the day AFTER the roofing, he came by again and wanted the other half. Umm. No. Generally, the wood rental is paid upon completion of the cement drying period — 22 days. He came twice more that week. As I hadn’t expected to need to have that money on hand, I didn’t have it right then. On his third trip to La Yacata, I was able to hand over $1000 pesos, and he seemed okay with that, the remainder to be paid once the wood is removed and picked up. 

Needless to say, there wasn’t a lot of extra cash in my pocket during September, even with a nice book royalties check. Here’s hoping October is a little easier in the financial department.

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Read more about our off-grid life in La Yacata in A to Z Reasons Why La Yacata is the Place to Be in Any Disaster: A Prepper’s Guide to Mexico, part of the La Yacata series.

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June Update and a Banana Tree

I feel like I’ve been remiss in sharing our goings-on. However, truth be told, there hasn’t been a lot going on in recent months.

The strengthening value of the peso against the falling value of the dollar means this morning, when I withdrew some funds, the conversion rate was 16 to 1. YIKES! Due to this financial crunch, there has been no frivolous spending (besides bags of ice). No day trips. No eating out. No fun things that cost any money at all. So I’ve nothing to report there. Fortunately, I’ve had steady work, and although my dollars aren’t going as far as they used to, they are keeping us fed. 

Building projects have been on hold pretty much as well. We have one small final room to complete, and it’s taken nearly 6 months to get the materials to do it. Last week, we scoured the animal pens and came up with enough stray bricks (bricks that were leftover from one project or another and set aside and forgotten about) to finish the walls. We also used the bricks from the patio by the pool. Now I need to save to get more cement to finish that. 

The pool, which has been our salvation in this heat wave, also needed some fixin’. I bought a pool pump last year but had to get the solar panel and battery to run it. It’s up and running now, but it seems we’ll need at least another solar panel and battery to run it for the hours it should to keep the water from getting murky. That’s not going to happen this month, so into the murky waters we go (and enjoy every blessed minute of it!). 

Bear and Cocoa

Bear, now that most of his digestive issues seem under control, has grown and grown. It appears he is a Doberman Shepherd mix. He has the hair, feet, and tail of a German Shephard and the body structure of a Doberman Pincher. That means he is like a freight train on walks when he gets a’goin’ and I’m exhausted after wrestling him around the block. 

I’ve been working in the garden, and this morning I noticed a few sprouts. I’d like to say that I can supplement our food with my garden, but I’m not sure with this crazy weather we are having. Rainy season should start any day now, but the forecast says at least another week of temperatures over 100 degrees in our area, which is not conducive to happy plants. 

The one plant that seems to thrive in this heat is our random banana plant. We didn’t plant it. It just sprung up last year in the pool area. It’s now reached the mesh roof, so I hope it’s stopped growing. Anyway, to my delight, it has blossomed and has little green bananas on it. Very exciting! 

I’ve also been working on editing the next book in A Women’s Survival Guide to Rural Mexico series in my darkened office with the ceiling fan on. Hopefully, the book and the heat wave will be finished soon!

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Staying Alive Bear-ly

Bear is feeling better!

So wouldn’t you know it, but Bear got sick. Of course, it was the weekend, and by the time Monday rolled around, he wasn’t able to keep any food down. Off to the town vet, we went.

Turns out he was running a fever because he had a parasite, respiratory, and eye infections all at once, poor guy. Although he may have picked up the infections on our walks, after all, coyotes, skunks, foxes, and other stray dogs wander about freely, it’s more likely he had these infections since we got him, and they just got worse because I didn’t know he had them. 

Bear wasn’t feeling well enough to grumble at the moto ride to town, the examination, the shots, or the waiting, although he was alert. The vet had a few signs for pets in adoption hanging up, some kittens, some chihuahuas, and two African albino hedgehogs. 

Every day for a solid week, Bear got a trip to town. During this period, Fuzz stopped eating for whatever reason, so he got a space capsule ride and an anti-parasite pill, just in case. The vet’s daughter made a fuss over him, which he loved, and he took the pill and swallowed it just for her. Whew!

By the following Monday, Bear was feeling better. He fussed a bit at the getting ready to go to town process, and while we waited, a googly-eyed pug stuck out his tongue at Bear, who barked back as if to say, “How rude.”

He got his first set of puppy vaccines and his own record book. The vet estimated he was about 5 months old.

Then George fell out of the second-floor window of my son’s house, and another round pet care began.

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Enjoy the ongoing animal adventures of one family when they move to central Mexico and try to figure it all out in the Animal Antics South of the Border series!

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