

We hope to add a few of these solar thermal water tubes to our home soon to increase our thermal mass and help to moderate temperature swings both in the winter and summer. Beyond solar, we depend on Cadet forced-air electric wall heaters on thermostats for all of our winter heating needs. They usual turn themselves on during the night and turn off soon after the sun comes up most days. In the summer, the positioning and excellent insulation in our new home keeps us cooler than most without the need for air conditioning. We have ceiling fans in every room.
We are newcomers to rural Colorado, so after two years I compiled a book about the total experience of moving here to build passive solar in the foothills: A Memoir of Retirement: From Suburbia to Solar in Southern Colorado Please feel free to contact me directly for copies of any of my books! MidlifeCrisisQueen@gmail.com
Glad you and Mike visited yesterday!
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Yes, Mary Anne:
What an education in high country living! LOVED IT! Thanks for sharing your life with us.
LLC
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Thinking of 7,000 feet as “not living high” boggles my mind! The pictures do indeed tell the tale, and it sure is nice to see all the wonderful pictures you post. Gorgeous places to live in any event, and a whole lotta work. 🙂
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Yep, 7,000 feet hardly seems like anything now, except when I try to walk uphill quickly! LOL! But I’m adjusting and it feels great!
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I was a mail carrier in KY and used a Subaru when it got bad. Those things will go anywhere. You live in some beautiful country and I love how you are doing it so economically.
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I know Rena! When we first got it Mike took it out and tried coming to a complete stop on an icy hill, and started right up it again! He came home and said, “That thing is practically a snow mobile!!!”
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What a great commentary on living over 8,000 feet high. Really enjoy your writing! Cheryle
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Can’t imagine living someplace where you have to have your own snowplow!
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And I thought I lived ‘up high and in the snow’! I bow to the masters . . . 🙂
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How high are you Diane? We’re only at 7,000 feet and that’s enough for me!
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I love the idea of wildlife cameras. That would be such a big plus for me. Our friends live at 8000 feet plus outside Santa Fe and getting there is an ordeal for sure.
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Yes Carol, Mike has set up bird feeders and a bath right outside our glass doors…so fun to watch them, plus we sometimes get deer there too!
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