Sunday, October 28, 2018

Completing a Job

One of things I am finding frustrating is the lack of completion. There is so much work to do that I feel I am jumping from one thing to another and nothing gets finished.  That being said, there are many things with a property this size that will never be completed. For example: I will forever be maintaining the forests to a level that makes me happy. I love walking through the property, but hate being stabbed by wild rose thorns. I will always be cutting down roses as I come across them and as they continue to crop up.

So, what have I been doing with my time? I did finish the compost bin, I have finished stripping carpet and vinyl off the floors. In one area there were three layers of vinyl, one layer of newspaper and it had all been topped off with one layer of carpeting!






 I have finished stripping 180 years worth of layers of paint off the first piece of original trim,



  I almost have a workshop set up.











I have cleaned up the yard portion of the property including trimming some bushes and hedges.










There is constantly a fire burning the wild roses that I am cutting out, as well I have been burning the black knot fungus which has gone unchecked and has been able to spread far and wide throughout the whole property.
Died on the trail and refused to move!

A delay we have been experiencing is the lawn tractor and its continuing issues. It has broken down twice now and has spent too much time in the shop and not enough time working around the property. This has changed our daily progress and forced us to shift focus - again leading to the inability to complete a task. It is back now, and working, so I'm off to pull in more firewood off the trail!






Yes, I have been busy filling 5-10 hours of work in each day. I think once winter sets in, it will feel different as we can tackle the inside of the house room by room and see a task through to an end.



Thursday, October 25, 2018

First Flight

Zoe and I took a little trip this week.

Although we have finally started to meet people here, Zoe is still a teenager who misses her friends. After two weeks of brainstorming ideas to get her to Beamsville inexpensively and time efficiently, we settled on flying. Zoe has never been on an airplane before and was therefore, understandably,  reluctant to go on one alone for the very first time. We decided I would fly with her on the new airline, Swoop, and leave her in the good care of her grandparents and brother for a month while I turned around and flew back to continue working on our property before winter set in.

I did have two days in Beamsville which I thoroughly enjoyed. I had a dinner with my son Brandon, my Aunt Judy, and my parents, and the second night I had dinner with the lovely ladies from Dr. Hennig's office! In between I loved having down time to quietly spend with mom and dad.

It was a whirlwind, but I was so happy to see Brandon again and flying was fun. Zoe was terrific and really enjoyed it as well. I think the fact that the airplane's colours are white and PINK really helped her feel like it was meant to be! The flight was just over two hours from Halifax to Hamilton and just under two hours back. I think we may become frequent flyers on this airline as it cost just barely more than the gas if we were to drive my truck. Not to mention the 25 hours one way and the exhaustion and frustration that comes with driving.

So now I am back home, alone, just me and the cat. It is a strange feeling but I am going to try and enjoy the quiet, moving at my own pace, accomplishing jobs I want, eating the foods I want and watching the tv shows I want. Wow...no compromising, I may get used to this?? No, I miss my Zoe like crazy and am counting down the days until she comes back home.

Saturday, October 20, 2018

Frustrations

GoogleI was known at Dr. Hennig's office as the "Google Queen" by my co-workers for my readiness to look up anything and find answers. The internet does not seem to be as big of an advertising tool here. When I need something, I am having much better success asking people than looking it up. For example: there are no chimney cleaners in the Digby area listed online. But I was able to get one name from my electrician and another name from the owner of the local Kwik-Way store. The young man at the dump gave me directions to the local metal recycler, the gentlemen at the power equipment store gave me some suggestions on finding archery or target shooting ranges, the auto mechanic gave me the number for drivers training and dog rescue organizations for Zoe. All of which I had previously Googled and came up with zero results!

Health professionals are just as difficult. We asked for recommendations before we left Beamsville but the recommendations we received were in Halifax (2 1/2 hours away) or Yarmouth (1 hour away). There are no chiropractors or orthodontists listed in the local google pages, or in the local papers for that matter, so we are going to be driving around looking for signs and cold calling doctors!! I'll keep you posted on how that goes.

We have already had some storm experience. Since we took possession of our home on September 7th we have had the remnants of two hurricanes blow through. Hurricane season is one of the reasons Zoe and I decided Annapolis Valley was a better area for us. We are more protected on St. Mary's Bay than we would have been on the Atlantic Coast. We had driving rains (which unfortunately led to my discovery of two leaks in the garage and one in the basement) with enough rain to raise the levels in our wells and enough rain to make we wonder why older homes have no eavestroughing??  Let's just say mine has some strategically placed eavestroughing now! When my dad was here we talked about jobs like that. The ones that were unplanned but pop up and can not be ignored, but delay the jobs I have on my to do list.

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Neighbours

As some of you know, it was my plan when we arrived at our new home to have Zoe bake some cookies that we could deliver to our neighbours and introduce ourselves.  Five weeks later we still had not done that. We had met no one besides employees at stores! And as nice as they all were, we wanted to know our neighbours.

So, Saturday morning we got up and started to bake, and bake, and bake. In fact we baked so much we ran out of time to deliver them! But Sunday, early afternoon off we went. The first house we chose to stop at has a horse that we had seen on many occasions out in their pasture. Zoe was very excited to meet these people and maybe even their horse! Here we met Ed originally hailing from Florida. His wife was not able to meet us at this time but Ed was friendly, gave us some great pointers on things to do in Nova Scotia and sent us onwards to another neighbour that he said was lovely and that we should meet. So off to the purple house and Kim. Yes, Kim was very nice, said she enjoyed aromatherapy and working with raw wools. Note to self: get sheep for the farm! Unfortunately, out of seven houses, those were the only two with people home today! Thats okay, we'll go out again another time.

Monday was very exciting for me! Ed's wife, Linda, came knocking on our door in the morning to introduce herself. Said she was sorry she had missed us the previous day. She brought some honey from their hives for us to enjoy and sat and chit chatted for a while. We started to talk about her horse and the horse community and she recommended contacting Jennifer and seeing if Zoe could visit her horses.

Early that same afternoon, Jennifer, in a fit of embarrassment, invited herself over to our house to chat about horses and 4-H. I absolutely loved that she came over and knew where we lived without being given the address!!! I was so happy to have two visitors in one day! She was so sweet and welcomed us over to meet her horses anytime. Not ones to refuse that offer, Zoe and I got up bright and early Tuesday morning and met Jennifer and her mother, Betty, at their barn where Zoe got to groom their three horses and lead them to and from the pasture. Zoe somehow managed to get out of mucking the stalls, but there is always next time! Jennifer and her mother were so kind, answered all our horse questions, gave us coffee and homemade salsa! I am very much loving this small town and am so happy that we finally broke away from our work and out of our shells and have started to meet our neighbours. I feel a tea/wine date coming up ladies!

These meetings made me start thinking about our marketplace. In the future we want to set up one of our outbuildings as a store. It looks like our neighbours all have wonderful farm made items (honey, salsa, woven goods) I think it may work for everyone if they also put items in our marketplace?


Sunday, October 14, 2018

Work

Wow is there ever a lot of work to do here!! I spent a couple of days so overwhelmed by the amount of "stuff" to do that I shut down. I started to doubt myself and my choice. Then one morning I came across the going away card from Sandi Risi. The final line she wrote in that card was "Now...pull up your big girl panties, pull your hair back, straighten up your crown and go get 'em". When I finally dried my tears, I unpacked my saw and pulled out my 2x4's and started building a compost bin. Silly maybe, but to me it was a very important first step as I knew the vegetable gardens I had planned in the spring would need all the compost I could create!

The following day my parents arrived for a 10 day work-cation. These 10 days put me on a path of self confidence and belief that I could do it. I just had to remember everything would not happen "now". People who know me well, know I am not a patient person...I want everything done NOW! So its a hard lesson to learn, but a very important one.

Over those 10 days, I watched my Zoe go from hesitant when her grampa told her to try the lawn tractor, to not letting anyone else touch her tractor. We cleared an "island" (our nickname for the overgrown areas around and between trees) we harvested and processed apples, we got the barn door running smoothly, we discovered more of the 25 acres including streams, meadows, another orchard, and very dense forest. We started to bring in firewood, we took numerous loads to the dump and cleaned up the mess remaining from the previous owners. We got so much accomplished its hard to believe we had time to enjoy good food, Nova Scotian wine and beer, evening fires and star gazing as well as showing off the area surrounding our new home.

I had so many plans for this move. I still have all those dreams and plans but I have tried to relieve the pressure of the timeline I had set for myself. I want to enjoy the process and not feel like I'm letting myself down if I don't have a garden dug this fall and chickens in the spring and a pig by June and a cow next year. I have realized its going to be okay if I have to get a job to tide us over until we are able to achieve a sustainable farm. And in the meantime...I have to go burn the wild climbing roses I cut out of the tulip tree this morning!

Thursday, October 11, 2018

10 Days in Beautiful Nova Scotia

We have loved our time in Barton, NS.  It is beautiful, more peaceful and it is slower paced, however, our zippy Ontario ways do not just disappear.

First,the landscape is beautiful. Shannon’s 25 acres show such diversity. Night times display the stars with an intensity that we have not seen for years. The countryside is hilly and we can see water at nearly every turn. 

Second, we enjoyed the tourist things. We had some good meals in Digby and especially at Bistro East in Annapolis Royal. We also had great meals at home thanks to both Zoe and Shannon. Shopping was fun in Annapolis Royal particularly at bookstores. We saw some incredible asian items at Far Fetched and Japanese Gallery. All the stores were run by enthusiastic, interesting and friendly owners. My favourite tourist activity was stopping at a replica of the Maud Lewis house and talking to the man who built it as he talked about Maud. The real house is now in the Halifax Museum but the original was two kilometres down the road from Shannon’s house.

Finally the work was rewarding but we hardly made a dint. I originally thought that we could get a room done inside the house but the weather was beautiful and we focused on the outdoors. The mowable property was mowed by Zoe. We trimmed trees, weeded gardens, picked apples and made applesauce. We explored the property trying to identify the parameters; we identified as many plants as possible, sometimes via pictures to Nancy Christie. We had lots of brush burning fires. Bill and Shannon tried to keep her equipment in shape with limited success. We were using materials hard. The meadow has many “Islands” made of trees and bushes but not mowed between and thus an island of an apple tree, 5 hazels, a laurel bush, and a spirea joined with blackberries, wild roses, goldenrod and asters developed. Four of us took 5 hours to clean one of these islands, creating hours of fuel for the fire pit. Maybe next time we will go in the winter and focus on one room. 

If any one is interested in a work-cation in Nova  Scotia. I think it can be arranged.

Sandy

Sunday, October 7, 2018

Happy Thanksgiving

As Thanksgiving weekend approached Zoe and I entered discussions on what to do for our first holiday alone in Nova Scotia. Do we ignore the holiday and pretend its any other day? Do we follow previous traditions with turkey and pumpkin pie? Do we develop our own traditions? Do we just have fun?

We decided have fun with some tradition thrown in. We love getting dressed up and cooking. We decided to have a pamper day where Zoe will do our nails and make up, we do our hair and wear fancy dresses! We bought a pumpkin, a ham, potatoes and still have lots of apples on our trees for a dessert. So...plan made.

We started the weekend of glam by getting blinged out as Zoe and I both got some sparkle in our noses!
Then came Sunday morning, we cut open a pumpkin, made pumpkin muffins, roasted pumpkin seeds and made pumpkin lattes! (If only we liked the taste of pumpkin!!)








Then we moved on to the beauty portion of the day. Nails done, dresses on, make up applied, hair styled.







Finally photo shoot time. We drove to Savary Park and then onto Gilbert's Cove Lighthouse and although it is cold and windy, we got some fantastic pictures of each other!





Back for dinner. This was the first full Thanksgiving dinner I have cooked myself and it turned out very yummy if I do say so.

Whether today was filled with traditions. Friends and family, good food, football and wine, or whether this was a year for new beginnings and new traditions, we hope you all enjoyed your day as much as we did.




Thursday, October 4, 2018

Learning and Loving

Our first few weeks have been filled with learning moments, with laughing moments, and with we made the right choice moments.

I discussed in a previous post the ease of dealing with the internet provider to set up a new account. Well, unfortunately, the internet was not on by move day as promised. In the afternoon I made a phone call, a very pleasant tech person walked me through some troubleshooting but in the end suggested a service truck come to our house the next day. While disappointed I was at least happy that the problem would be resolved. About an hour later "Mike" called saying he was with Bell Aliant and had finished a service call in my area early, did I mind if he stopped by to resolve my internet issues now!?! Was he kidding, I said YES, hung up and got that super good Nova Scotia is awesome feeling! Mike came by, got us set up and told us to call him "directly" if we had any further issues!

Learning moment...we had been here 3 nights and had a scheduled 12 hour power outage while work was being done on the highway. No problem, we got out candles and used the barbecue, and wanted to read through some paperwork that we had found in the garage attic. (It was really interesting paperwork on the family that has lived previously in this house for three generations. We were hoping to find house history but in fact only found personal history.) Our learning moment came when Zoe decided she would have a shower. We are on a well system. Any flags going off? Not for me...what did I know? After Zoe drained the water tank and had to rinse off her soapy hair using our bottled water, I started to get concerned, but nothing I could do with the power still out. At 4:00am the next morning I was woken up to all the clunks and bangs and whirs of the power coming back on. I was happy but...what about the water. I got out of bed and opened a tap...NO WATER! Up to my computer I went and you tubed for 15 minutes until I understood priming the well pump and what we had done to the pump pressure by using it with no electricity! Like I said lesson learned, water back working and no more Zoe showers during a power failure!

People continue to be a source of joy for me. We did return to Nothin' Fancy in Yarmouth as I said I would when we needed furniture. When Zoe and I walked in, a staff member greeted us and directed us to the mattresses when we asked. He finished with his customer then joined us welcoming us back, asking where we found the house, how my son was, and if we had any animals yet on our property. He had remembered almost everything we talked about over two months ago!

There is both plumbing and electrical work that I need to hire out to a local professional. I had someone in whose company does both electrical and plumbing to give me some quotes. When I had finished going over the list of my wants and needs, he continued to walk around the property and point things out to me, explain how things worked and what I would need. Like under coating my truck, and not running if any bears should approach me out of the woods at the back of our property. He then gave me his business card and suggested I call his office and talk to his secretary (who also happened to be our realtors mom!) and ask her for names and numbers of any tradespeople I may need. She could find me good, honest, local people. The mechanic who performed the Nova Scotian safety check on my truck said the same thing, to call him or his wife if we need any names of people to do work for us. He also is trying to find a good rescue dog for us!! People are so warm and inviting and generous. I really can no longer understand why I was told so often that I would not be accepted being from Ontario. I have met only kind, generous, super friendly people who have gone well out of their way for Zoe and I.