Sunset on the road to Summerville

We drove up to Summerville Monday evening to meet the drafter who will draw up our house plans. My phone and my GPS both routed us the “back way”, which leads to the west of Texas Valley rather than up the major highway (US 27). The nice part of it was that we got a decent view of the west as the sun was setting. It was so dramatic that Leah insisted that I stop to take a picture. This is a panorama using three images I got with my phone. Click for a bigger view.

sunset pano

Unfortunately, the lower part of the sky ended up washed out. It might have been possible for me to get better exposures if I had tried a little harder, but we were running a few minutes late so I just stopped and grabbed the shots.

This made both of us regret not being able to see the western horizon, either at our current house or at our future house.

We made it up to Summerville and handed off my floor plan drawings to the drafter. She told us that if we lived in the county where she lives, my amateur drawings would be sufficient to get a building permit. Not here, though.

It will probably take about four weeks to get our drawings completed.

Marking the line

We had a surveyor mark our back property line on Friday. He’s going to provide us with a site plan as well. That’s part of the county inspection department’s requirements for a building permit. Even aside from the necessity, we needed the line marked so we would know how far back we can place the house.

I met him at the lot after he finished the survey. It had been dry for a couple of days but the cleared area was still very muddy.

I had tried to mark the line myself, since the interior corner was marked and I knew the compass heading that the back line took. Unfortunately, my line was 10 or 15 feet further back than the actual line. That means we have to push the house a little further downslope than we had been thinking. It’s not much, but every foot further upslope gives us that much better opportunity for a view.

Today (Monday) we’re driving up to Summerville, about a half hour north of us, to meet the woman who’s going to draw our house plans. She has a full-time job and does drafting on the side, so we have to meet around 6:30 PM after her normal work hours. The Wendy’s on the north side of Summerville seemed a good place since we both know where it is; that means we’ll be having dinner at Wendy’s. We’ll probably take the dogs so they can help us finish the French fries.

She has estimated that it will take a couple of weeks to finish the plans. That gives us time to get a soil test for the septic system and, as I mentioned earlier, an actual street address.

We’ve had one piece of unsettling news – our new next-door neighbors are running short of water. Their well is around 100 feet deeper than ours and only about 75 feet away. We had to replace a failed well pump, but we have had no problems, even during the dry weather we experienced over the last few years. It’s still disconcerting to learn about it.

They just moved in a few weeks ago, so it’s more disconcerting for them than to us.

A larger clearing

Neighbor John has cleared a large area around where our new house will go, from almost the back property line to a little beyond where the front of the house will sit. He has uprooted and hauled away around 10 dump-truck loads of tree debris and has scraped the whole area clean.

I last saw the lot on Friday; so much had changed that it was hard to get my bearings. The tree I selected a few weeks ago as the central point was gone. In preparation for the clearing I had put in some stakes away from where I expected the clearing to take place. There were two sets of stakes. I set them so that each set defined a line, and if you put yourself at the point where the lines intersected, you would be at the left rear corner of our future house. When I stood there on Friday, nothing looked familiar.

John worked late on Saturday. When I went to the lot on Sunday, it looked so different from Friday that it was hard to get my bearings again. This is a panorama taken from near the rear of the cleared area, looking first to the north into Little Texas Valley through the trees. You can actually see into the valley better than it looks from this photo. The radio tower in the center of the photo is on Lavender Mountain at the other end of Lavender Trail. Rome is behind the trees just to the left of the truck. Although it’s not visible in the photo, there is a view of the western part of town roughly where the truck cab is. I think some judicious tree cutting will give us a pretty good view of town. Unfortunately the view into Texas Valley will disappear when the trees leaf out. That part of the view is through trees on someone else’s property, so we can’t cut any of them to improve the view. Click to embiggen.

cleared_lot

There is a lot of clearing left to do. The driveway will take a different path from the current drive, so there will be clearing to the right of the photo. The area for the septic system leach field will be cleared, which should open up the view towards town.

I have found someone to turn our house drawings into plans that the inspection department should accept. John remembered the number of a surveyor who can mark our back property line and provide a site plan, which is one of the requirements for a building permit. The next step is to find someone to do the soil testing required for the septic system; that’s another requirement for the permit.

There is one more important call to make. We have to get a street address.

Red cool chili peppers

Here we are in January and our jalapeño plant is finishing up its appointed job of ripening its fruit.

pepper plant

Some websites say jalapeño plants can live several years if protected from weather that’s too cold. Other sites are less optimistic about their survival, or the quality of the fruit they produce in their old age. We’re keeping ours in our office, so I guess we’ll see.

Leah was preparing some shrimp for dinner a few days ago. She suggested making cornbread and using some jalapeños in the mix. That sounded good to me.

chili ready for cutting

As I have mentioned before, our jalapeño plant was a gift from our neighbor Deb. They have a nice chili aroma and a nice, mild chili flavor but absolutely no heat at all. So I cut up a few store-bought green pickled jalapeños for a little spice. Unfortunately I didn’t put enough in.

chili cornbread

You can see plenty of red here, but not much green. I still thought it was pretty good, but Leah wanted more heat. I guess next time I’ll put more green chilis in.

I have saved some seeds from our jalapeño plant. Between them and our current plant, if it survives, we should get more mild chilis next year. I think I’ll buy another plant or seeds and hope for a spicier jalapeño to mix with the mild ones.

I’m looking forward to that.

Muddy spring

On Tuesday we hit our first problem with construction of the new house. Rather, neighbor John hit it with his bulldozer. It’s a spring at the entrance of the new driveway.

Tuesday was the first reasonably dry day in more than two weeks, so in the afternoon John  began clearing again. Some time later he called (but I missed the call) to have me come down and look at how deep his dozer had sunk into the mud. Leah told me about the call, so I went down the street to see what was going on. John had moved the dozer, and there was a fairly strong spring emerging from a depression that it had made when it sank into the mushy area.

muddy_dozer

This is John driving and his helper directing. The spring is about where the pine branch is hanging down towards the drive, right across from John’s helper. John has already moved some mud to let the spring flow down to the right of the drive. The area above the spring is not too wet for work, but the driveway entrance is critical for the work to continue

I had noticed that the driveway entrance looked muddier than further up the drive. I thought it might just be surface runoff, but obviously it wasn’t.

It’s a problem, but the whole construction process is really just a series of problems that have to be solved. John is calling in someone with a backhoe to make a ditch upstream of the driveway to divert the spring into an existing ditch and then into a culvert.

He’s going to bring in some rock to make a solid surface at the driveway entrance. That will be good, because this video should give some indication of just how muddy it was.