« POPE 5 Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next

Re: Life in NH - Update #2 

By: Decomposed in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (2)
Fri, 01 Jun 18 1:07 AM | 66 view(s)
Boardmark this board | Pope 5
Msg. 01759 of 62138
(This msg. is a reply to 01758 by Decomposed)

Jump:
Jump to board:
Jump to msg. #

The property on which I reside is shaped something like a triangle with its 900 foot base running along a road connecting two towns and a historic stone wall defining part of one of the triangle's two sides. Nothing at all defines the other side. I know the point on the road where that boundary begins, but I'd need a surveyor to tell me its precise path. The fact is, I have a tax map that shows me the shape of the property but walking the perimeter involves a lot of guesswork. The land's actual size is indeterminate. Town records, tax assessments and the previous owner have told me that it is either 9, 10 or 11 acres, respectively. It doesn't really matter to me. I won't be constructing anything that's even close to the property lines, and the taxes I pay are based on 10 acres. That seems reasonable. Hiring a surveyor is expensive, so I may never know the truth. I'm not that motivated.

Uploaded Image

The land has a slope with its high point being at the road and its low point being the apex of the triangle. The hill is significant but nothing like what I'll have to deal with on the larger property. In fact, much of the forested portion (6 or 7 acres) of the parcel is fairly flat. Fairly. Nothing here that's natural is ever truly flat.

The unforested area - which starts at the road - is 2.5 or 3 acres. My house sits roughly in the middle of it with something like a 500 foot front yard and 400 foot back, looking downhill both to the front and left. A small stream runs for most of the year where the field ends. It's a nice view.

Uploaded Image

When the trees shed their leaves, I get some light pollution straight ahead from towns in Vermont. It's not bad, though. The Milky Way, passing satellites, meteorites and even Andromeda are all easy to see on clear nights, assuming the moon cooperates.


That's a lot of jabbering about where I'm living, but it's essential to explaining what I've been doing so far. The smartassier among you (and you know who you are) will likely, respond with "Oh. Yardwork." Yeah, that's it. But it's a *lot* of yardwork. That kind of turns it into a whole different creature.

I'm not a fan of ticks, so I prefer to keep the lawn short. I mow the field and driveway with a JD tractor pulling a brush hog, then get the edges, steep slopes (there are some near the house and in the back yard) and places where I need it shorter using an ordinary lawnmower. The brush hog cuts a swath of about 4 feet, trimmed to 4 or 5 inches. Setting it to cut any closer than that runs a high risk for the blade. It's easy to bottom out, and sometimes that means hitting rock.

Uploaded Image

This time of the year, I have to wait on working the field until the dew is gone, and then quit when it gets hot. That gives me a window of 2 or 3 hours. In that time, I can get maybe a quarter of the field mowed. Many of the days are rainy, so mowing the field can keep me occupied for the better part of a week.

With all the small storms (no day is safe), the grass grows fast. I had a bucket of water in the back yard and it looked like the grass around it was an inch higher every day. By the time the mowing is over, it's time to start again!

That might make it sound hopeless, but it's not. The grass won't grow as quickly in the summer when there aren't so many storms. More importantly, there won't be so many obstacles.

Homeowners with fields surrounded by forest are involved in a war of sorts with their trees. The trees want in and will get their way pretty quickly if they aren't regularly combated. After every significant storm, some of them drop branches, drop pine cones and lean further into the field. Saplings are constantly springing up. Most years, a tree or two topple onto the field. Some take a chainsaw to clear. The dead trees fragment into hundreds of pieces when they hit. Ferns growing on the edge of the forest grow quickly and obscure fallen branches. All these things make it harder to mow, and they are especially bad now, when I haven't done a really good job of clearing the field in twelve years.

But it will get better. I can cut down the trees and branches that are most likely to fall or lean down in the path of the tractor. I'll learn more about the field - where its dips and rock protrusions are - so that I can mow at a higher speed. The gravel driveway, now in regular use, might not need mowing at all in the future. Some of the reeds that grow fastest in the back yard may die off completely if I mow them down each time they try coming back. Best of all, I can check the field after every storm and get rid of whatever falls before it becomes an obstacle that the brush hog can't handle.




Avatar

Gold is $1,581/oz today. When it hits $2,000, it will be up 26.5%. Let's see how long that takes. - De 3/11/2013 - ANSWER: 7 Years, 5 Months


- - - - -
View Replies (1) »



» You can also:
- - - - -
The above is a reply to the following message:
Life in NH - Update #1
By: Decomposed
in POPE 5
Fri, 01 Jun 18 12:52 AM
Msg. 01758 of 62138

I said I'd keep you guys apprised of my status now that I'm living in the boondocks, so I apologize for failing to do so. The problem I have with doing that is that when internet access is days or more apart, it's hard to do more than catch up with what the bunch of you have been posting. I've managed a response here and there, but there hasn't been time to write anything longer.

I'm going to take a different approach, writing about some of the things I'm up to when I'm offline and pasting what I've written to Bobs when I can. It still won't be simple - things I've written may be dated by the time they're posted, and relevant pictures will be difficult since I can't very well load them to an image host until I have internet access. We'll see how it goes.

Although I left Virginia on April 15th, I was in NH for only nine days before flying to CA. I spent 21 days there working to get my father's house emptied, inspected, repaired, improved (metal garage door added, lawn fertilized, trees pruned, window blinds added, ), painted (inside and out), carpeted and listed. The bigger jobs went to contractors, but getting everything done in 21 days was hard . . . or impossible, as it turned out. I left before the painting, carpeting and cleaning were complete, but my sister is still there and can oversee the contractors who were painting and who would be putting in carpeting. I don't feel too bad about leaving her with that since she was the reason it wasn't done. As the executor, she controlled the purse strings, and she put the brakes on almost everything I was trying to complete. Oh well. I don't work well with her. If she'd just gotten out of the way, the place would be up for sale right now.

The most frustrating part of the experience is that the realtors I interviewed all told me that April and May are the sweet spot as far as home sales go. People who are relocating to Sacramento - or to anywhere, really - often make an initial trip two months before in order to initiate home buying, and most people relocate over the summer. Therefore, as I kept telling my sister, she might save some money by interviewing tons of contractors but LOSE far more by failing to list the house at the most opportune time.

Oh well. I'm in New Hampshire now and my wife is the one in California (visiting her family and attending a convention.) I haven't talked to my sister since I returned. I'm sure she'd have called if the house was now listed but there's been nothing. I'm not going to call to ask. I'm tired of talking to her and disgusted by the anchor she hung around my neck while I was there.


« POPE 5 Home | Email msg. | Reply to msg. | Post new | Board info. Previous | Home | Next