Showing posts with label diesel generator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label diesel generator. Show all posts

19 September, 2015

Sand and Early Morning Rainbows

Sand - there is new sand on the beach!  Still nowhere what had been there, but things are improving.
The sandbags along the shore are almost covered by sand; only the tied ends are visible as white blobs on the wet sand to the right of the dock.  The bags to the left of the dock are fully covered.  You can also make out the submerged sandbags of the breakwater that runs under the dock in the foreground.
 The shore is still a big mess with washed up seagrass and driftwood, but even that is gradually getting covered by sand.
View from the dock looking toward the buttonwood tree.  The shore has built up a bit of a slope now.  The brown stuff under the buttonwood is seagrass sitting on top of the sandbags that were placed in front of the buttonwood to keep it from getting undermined by the waves.
As I write this, the breakwater extends all the way down our property to the south and they are still working on the part to the north.  In the photo below, taken Sept 15th, the breakwater extends from the dock only to just in front of the buttonwood tree. Notice how the wave breaks hard to the left of the buttonwood, but is not breaking at all between the buttonwood and the dock.  That is just what we wanted!
Breakwater in action!  See how much flatter the waves are near the dock?
We think we are the right track with the breakwater.  Since I took those photos a few days ago, a lot of seagrass has washed in on top of the sand, so we can't really tell if the sand is still there.

The sea is beautiful and calm today.  The crew made good progress extending the breakwater to the north.  Next week is a short week because Monday is the celebration of the Independence of Belize.  Never-the-less, I believe they will finish Stage One of the breakwater next week, unless the weather turns bad.  Also, we have the electrical engineer, Jose, with us today.  He and Dennis are repairing the big diesel generator.  We had the coil rewound, which required shipping the coil to the town of Spanish Lookout.  So they are working on that as I write this.
Jose and Dennis working on the big diesel generator.  Note the essential tools - the can of Liquid Wrench and the persuasive hammer.
This morning at dawn, a very gentle rain shower drifted in from the southeast.  The sun was low on the horizon (as it tends to be at dawn!), peeking through the falling rain over the sea.  To the west was a gorgeous double rainbow.  By the time I got my camera and went back up to the sunset balcony, the intensity of the rainbow had faded, but it was still a lovely sight.
Rainbow over the jungle.  The Maya Mountains are low in the distance.
A Great Egret flew over.
And thus started another day.

29 March, 2015

Let There Be Light!

I haven’t posted a new blog entry for ages – December 2014, in fact.  There has been quite a bit to blog about, but I am guilty of becoming bored by my own blog.  How did that happen?  I have still been reading other peoples blogs and they don’t bore me (well, not all of them do!). 

After pondering this for weeks, I realize that I have lost my blogging inspiration.  My original target audience for this blog was my Mother, with other family and friends as a bonus.  Dennis and I bought our bit of sea front jungle in Belize in 2004 with the intent to eventually move here.  At that time, it was difficult to stay in touch with my Mother during our bi-annual 2-week trips here; the telephone service was terrible - even worse than my Mother’s hearing!  So phone calls just didn’t work.  And she worried about us being so far away.  No matter that we would be only a little farther from her home in Georgia than we already were living in Rochester, MN or that we would be closer to her than my middle sister who lives in California.  “You’ll be in another country” she said.  She had a point, of sorts.  In an effort to keep her from feeling left behind and to make Belize less foreign to her, I started this blog in 2009.  She easily could follow our preparations as we geared up to move to Belize, and perhaps catch some of our excitement as we made progress.
Christmas Canoe Race at Lake Russell State Park in Georgia.  Mother was always up for adventure!
Well, the blog worked.  She loved reading it and seeing the photos of our trips and also our life in Rochester.  She could look at it any time on her computer, even during the middle of sleepless nights that plagued her later years.  You can read a little more about my incredible Mother here.  Sadly, she died in 2012 at the noteworthy age of 92.  Please read about her life here.  She would have been 95 on March 18th.  I miss her still.  The hole she left is as large as it ever was, but perhaps not as deep.  Or maybe the memories of her buoy me, keeping me afloat in the space of her absence.

As I was thinking about her on her recent birthday, I realized that not having her inspiring requests, ok – her impatient queries “when are you going to write another blog?!” - to spur me along had resulted in a sad reduction of blogging frequency on my part, not to mention a sad increase in blogging drudgery.  So I aim to set that right with more frequent and less boring posts!

What’s this about LIGHT in the title?  We got phase 1 of our solar power installed earlier this month, that’s what!  This is an amazing change to our daily lives.  Until now, our electricity has been supplied by a diesel generator that charges a battery bank.  We run (ran, now.  Past tense is a wonderful thing.) the generator 8 or 9 hours a day, from 6:30 am ‘til 11:00 am and again from 5:30 pm ‘til 8:30 pm.  Even longer when power tools are used for construction.  That uses a lot of diesel fuel, which we have to haul here by boat from Independence, 45 minutes away.  It is also incredibly noisy.  We have enjoyed the quiet evenings so much.  The mornings are still noisy due to the construction.  And since the existing battery bank is not sufficient to supply the power tools, we still have to use a smaller gas generator for them.  L  Hence Phase 2 to come with more panels and another battery bank.

We had a crew from ProSolar in Belmopan, the capitol of Belize, come down for the installation. Here are some photos of the installation.
Kyle and Winston from ProSolar getting the cottage roof ready.  This is the original caretaker cottage that we built so someone would always live on site even before we moved down.
The west side of the cottage where the solar panels will go.  Our new addition to our vacation cabana is in the background. Phase 2 solar panels will go on its roof.
Manuel, Winston, and Kyle have 6 panels up and 3 to go.
This is from an email I sent to my sibs on March 17th describing what it entailed to get them here:

“… major advances today!  Phase 1 of our solar system has been installed; we are pumping photons!  We have 9 panels on Richard and Joy's cabana that are charging up the battery bank that we had been using the generator to charge for the past few years.  These batteries are absorbed gel batteries and seem to be pretty good, better than the lead acid batteries that we had before.  We will still need to run the generator several times a week until we get Phase 2 completed, which we hope to do by the end of May.  

We have a crew of 3 guys from ProSolar, a Belmopan-based outfit that we like, doing the installation.  To get them here, we had to arrange transportation from the end of the road in Monkey River Village, accommodation here in Englishtown, and meals.  It is a major endeavor to get all this coordinated.  They arrived late yesterday afternoon.  We arranged for them to park their truck at our friends Chery and Nevan's place.  Chery and Nevan also have a little restaurant, so they did dinner last night and tonight.  Lloydie did the boat transportation to Englishtown.  They stayed at one of the SteppingStones cabanas and we had Lloydie's partner Diana, do the cleaning there since SteppingStones is no longer operating as a resort.  I stocked the bathroom with towels, soap, and toilet paper.  I did breakfast (scrambled eggs, ham, refried beans, flour tortillas, watermelon, papaya, OJ, coffee) for them this morning at 7:30, after they had already worked for an hour, and a snack (pineapple, papaya, Scottish shortbread) this afternoon.  Our friend Elna, who does lunches for her husband's tour business, did lunch (rice and beans, stewed chicken) for us.  I will do breakfast for them tomorrow (a creation that Dennis often makes that we call a quesorito - refried black beans, deli turkey, cheese, sautéed onions and sweet pepper in a flour tortilla).  And then I will cross my fingers that they are gone by noon because I am out of food and out of friends who cook!  We love being remote, but the half-day trip to get groceries requires advance planning.  They seem happy with accommodations and food, so I am happy too.  We want to make sure they are willing to come back for Phase 2!

Also - the veranda roof is complete.  Amazingly, it looks even better than I had hoped; it really pulls together the 2 separate buildings in a complementary way, almost as if we planned it to look like this.  Ha! Tomorrow they will start putting the decking and rails on the little balcony at the front.  Later this week they will start putting the flooring on the veranda.

Now if we can just get the septic issue resolved ...

Raising a cup to St. Paddy today and to Mother tomorrow!”

Below is a photo of the new addition that we are building onto the vacation cabana that we built in 2006-7.  The cabana has not quite 650 sq feet of interior space which will be more than doubled with the addition.
The addition (on the right) to our 2006 vacation cabana.  A work in progress ...

The View that makes it worth it.
View from the vacation cabana veranda in 2008.
There is light!  The one in the fridge is my favorite.  ;-)