Sunday, November 7, 2010

Rainy season starts

Hi friends and family,

It's quite fun for me to think of things to share with you all week, until I have so many things to say I can't wait for a day when we're running the generator anyway; like today, doing some laundry, too wet to work outside just yet, so I can get on my computer.

It's been storming and pouring here for a few days, 10 inches from Friday noon to Saturday noon! I was just driving back from a big plant sale at a fruit tree wholesaler, the station wagon loaded down with 24 avocados, citrus, sapote, rollinia, figs, soursop, a curry and a miracle fruit, when it started to pour, and barely has stopped since, now these babies (well some are 5 feet) have been sitting out in the yard getting knocked about by the wind... fine welcome to their new home.

When it rains like this the stream jumps up and churns reddish brown, and the waterfalls pound like thunder. Sometimes I'll think it's a jet plane going overhead low, but it's just the roar of Umaumau Falls, which is the next stream over the hill, or Kamaee Stream, which is right here. Just a few days ago I was lying out on a wonderfully smooth basking rock in the middle of Kamaee, absolutely in a state of divine sunshine bliss, as was Cinnamon the little Chihuahua neighbor dog hanging out with me. Now that rock is getting even smoother, blasted by bits of lava and clay.


Basking rock on Kamaee above small waterfall we climb through to swim below

Earlier this week was spent planting and mowing. I greatly appreciate that there are no: ticks, snakes, poison ivy, or poisonous spiders here. It amazes me that I can thrash through the tall grasses in pursuit of a lemon or some other fruit usually, without really worrying about much other than some pricker slashes from the few invasives that don't realize they are on an island and aren't supposed to need pricker protection (no indigenous mammals).

I don't like that there is: rat lung disease, which makes it so you can't eat anything fresh from the garden without careful examination, triple washing, and possibly cooking - it's a nematode carried by slugs and snails via rat host. Every other week you hear someone attest to a different version of this disease - big big deal, or no big deal, in the slug slime or not, rinse in vinegar or no difference from washing in water... It is truly amazing that this potentially life-threatening disease has received so little research that after years and years of it being in southeast Asia, now here, and moving into the south U.S., so little is understood about it. I also am not crazy about the rats that carry some other disease in their pee so you also have to be careful about the outside of things like bananas, avocados, and the luscious liliquoi that rats may have crawled over. I am always telling Jason not to just bite into those...


Giant African Snail, lured by rotting liliquoi; Dan had never seen one of these here before


Other than that, it's pretty much just mosquitoes and centipedes for biting pests, not bad at all. And the centipedes are really shy, preferring dark undersides of rotting debris, and they do eat tons of other garden bugaboos. Oh and bees, anticipating I will get stung this season, and ready to try two antidotes I've heard of - smash up/chew and apply either plantain or hono hono grass. Geckos and skinks are plentiful and companionable and also are great bug catchers, as are the beautiful and large spiders.


Maybe this tiny skink (that was in our house) eats fleas?

Also here's a picture of house so you can see where we live, temporarily, while getting everything in place to build a regular house. The everything includes - a subdivision approval to get a building permit, architect's okay on house design, plumber design for catchment and cesspool. We are actively working on all these things and hoping to get started with house this winter.


Temporary house that gets bigger and bigger as we wait for building permit... from left to right, first the living area was built, then kitchen, shower, laundry, potting shed.

There is always the irony that in our effort to live "sustainably off-grid," we are using more fossil fuels than the average town dweller, and probably more than a suburban home too. I have mowed the whole place twice and must say that one thing I didn't anticipate would be actually breathing in more gasoline fumes than usual, as I chug along behind the mower. Eventually the hydro will provide electricity and we can switch to battery-powered tools and car, but in the meantime just putting in the hydro uses a lot of fuel.

So clearly we are not reducing our carbon footprints, especially of course with the air travel added in. BUT IT IS SO COOL! And fun! And I am so pleased with being able to be here and being able to make this change in my life. I am just loving my days of working in the garden, gleaning foods, cooking, some town and neighbor visits for a bit of social life, and generally working with Dan to make all our plans take shape.

One more picture - the seedlings in the seed-start area attached to the laundry (to the far right in the house picture). Planted everything within 2 weeks of getting here and already have had to transplant half to larger pots. I am very proud of these babies, and trying to toughen both them and myself up before planting them in the harsh world of the outside garden!

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