Summer is here

Summer has arrived. I know because the A/C has started to come on in the afternoons. The mornings however are awesome. The past few mornings have been in the upper 50s and sleeping beneath a cover is pretty much mandatory.
For the most part, I have finished the woodshed and am in the process of cutting firewood and stocking it. I still need to put the plexiglass windows in and build a door. But, that can wait.
The next project is to remove some dirt from beneath the porch (between the house and garage) to give me decent headroom and put a floor in. This is not a “rush” project, thank goodness. I did shovel out 4 wheelbarrow loads the other day.
Well, that’s it for now.

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Some feeling of independence

While chopping firewood the other day I had this thought:

Firewood

For many years I sailed.  My last sailboat was the U.S. documented vessel “38 Special”, a vintage 1960’s 38 foot sloop designed and built by Ted Irwin.  She was well found, fast and beautiful.

My dog and I enjoyed many days of extended cruising.  I found that shortly after loosing the sight of land, life became simple!  I enjoyed the silence, the gentle motion of the ocean and the independence of being able to navigate the world’s oceans using just the power that nature herself provides – the wind.  The satisfaction and pride of being able to go where I pleased using absolutely no engine at all was fantastic.

Now here I am living in the mountains on the edge of the National Forest surrounded by a different mother nature.  Beauty is everywhere.  Other than the rustle of wind in the trees or occasional sound of wildlife, the silence ever present (bar the mail delivery vehicle once a day).  I walk into the forest and loose myself for hours and enjoy a peacefulness not entirely unlike that of sailing upon an ocean with nothing but water in sight.

It’s winter.  We usually don’t have extreme cold here where I am but I still have to heat the house for a couple months in the winter.  These days I’m heating with firewood in a furnace located in the basement.  I find the exercise of chopping and splitting firewood to be healthy and invigorating.  More than this I find the whole process to be rewarding.  I feel the independence and satisfaction of being less dependent upon being “on the grid” to be similar to sailing.

Each time I chop wood (yes, I use a chainsaw and log splitter most of the time) I think about NOT buying propane for the “other” furnace.  It makes me smile and feel a bit more independent . . . not unlike being miles from the world in the middle of an ocean.

Life is good here in the mountains.

Deep into winter

It’s the second week of February, 2013 and winter is pressing on. I went to Florida for a couple weeks in December. It was good to visit friends and spend the holidays with them.
Now I understand the snowbird mind set. Close up your home leaving it operating under minimal utility use, head south and stay with friends or relatives. Ha! Like I said I enjoyed visiting many friends over the couple weeks I was there. But, there’s no place like home.
It has been another fairly mild winter. No blizzards so far. The locals talk about one happening every 10 years or so. We have had one snow so far. It was pretty and only lasted a day. While it has been mild, it still has been cold enough to have to heat the house most days since the first of the year. This winter I am heating with firewood instead of using the gas furnace. I have a wood burning furnace downstairs and it is connected to the existing ducts so I get a nice warm home using natural resources (other than the small amount of electricity for the fan that circulates the air to and from the furnace (forced air heat). It feels good to be partially off the grid.
I’m trying to learn how to use Photoshop. It’s beginning to make sense. I am not interested in dramatically altering my photographs (yet) but any tool I can use to make them better I am willing to explore.
Oh, I just dropped off two framed pieces at the gallery in the Art Center in Blue Ridge. Maybe I’ll get discovered, ha ha.
Spring is around the corner. My apple tree is in bloom and I fear a cold snap will kill the blossoms as happened last year. Daffodils are blooming and in the heat of the afternoons bees are beginning to explore. The dog and I are looking forward to hiking in the forest this spring. It is such a marvelous place to see nature renew itself.
Ciao for now.

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