Big improvements! First we got the first layer of stucco applied and then all the lights and ceiling fans went in! Do you know how stucco is made?
Well, I didn’t until I saw the men applying a special mix of concrete, sand, and who knows what else to the outside of our house.
Then they slap this mixture onto every surface of the house. This is only the first layer. After this dries and cures they’ll come back to add the second coat with the color in it. We have chosen a terra cotta color for the outside of our house. Can’t wait to see it! And speaking of color…
the wildflowers are at their best up there right now! I cannot get over how much of a difference six inches of rain can make!
We have millions of these yellow flowers plus native Lupines, and Indian Paintbrush!
And this mystery flower is a lovely purple, my favorite! Thanks to my botanist friend Jan we now know this is the Showy Four O’Clock, (Mirabilis multiflora). It only blooms in the late afternoon and then all night. I’ll try to get a better photo of the flowers in bloom soon.
In the meantime, here is a great photo of it! Isn’t it amazingly PURPLE?
Inside we have most of the tiling done…
Then it’s time to finish the kitchen and baths, and we FINALLY have a move-in date!
This summer the solstice begins on June 21st at 12:38 P.M. EDT, Father’s Day! The summer solstice heralds the beginning of summer in the Northern Hemisphere. I hope you can spend time outdoors this weekend, enjoying the longest day of the year!
This morning we took a drive up to the new home we’re having built in the foothills west of here. Our kitchen cabinets just went in this week! This color is called Hargrove Cinnamon, and the wood is birch. Lovely huh? I can’t wait to cook my first meal here!
The house is really taking shape now! The view from the kitchen sink island is seen above, an amazing perspective on the Spanish Peaks!
We followed County Road 520 south on our way back to Walsenburg (a long, winding dirt road) and saw yellow Plains Greenthread (or Navajo Tea) EVERYWHERE!
Mixed in occasionally with the Greenthread are some very healthy looking native Lupine specimens!
Here’s your very own Lupine bouquet. HAPPY SUMMER SOLSTICE!
I had an insight this morning. I have most certainly experienced more difficult times in my life than this past year and a half; struggling through the process of leaving our old home, past lives and dear friends behind to build in this new, rural setting.
So glad we have each other to turn to. I cannot imagine this experience without Mike’s loving support and caring. This is “sustainable living” at its most basic, and Rasta our little dog helps immensely too… comedy relief is ESSENTIAL!
So we’re back with our original builder, who is supposedly finishing our home. Two weeks later he hasn’t even begun to finish tiling our small home.
Because of all the extra rainfall we have received here (over 10 inches since the middle of April!), the wildflowers are going WILD up near our new home!
Especially these yellow flowers called Plains Greenthread (or Navajo Tea), but we also have Indian Paintbrush, Lupines and a couple Penstemons around.
Just had to share these amazing fields! Who knows when they’ll be like this again…
In the meantime I have been taking my morning walks around Walsenburg, thinking about its history and the families who have lived here forever. After one year of living in this small town 50 miles north of the New Mexico border, I have a much better sense of who lives here.
After Walsen assisted in the incorporation of the town, he was honored by formally naming the new town “Walsenburg”. In 1876, Walsen opened the area’s first coal mine, and coal was king here for nearly a century.