On the Verge

The bees have been buzzin’! The energy this week has been exciting and enervating, like those early days when framing the house, with nail guns hammering, circular saws a-whirring, air compressors burping, and norteño music filling the air. We had a fair bit of activity last week, but this week it is as though someone hollered “Let’s get this thing done!” and kicked it into high gear. And suddenly appliances were in place, bed frames assembled, fixtures installed, furniture received. Outdoors, final shaping of the lot was completed, the pads for my pump house and propane tank were built, sprinkler system started. Concrete truck and mattresses arriving this afternoon.

I did have one surprise the other day. We had a torrential rain a few nights ago so the next morning I went to check on the rainwater tank to see if it was full. I opened the access hatch on top of the tank and the water level was nearly to the brim of the liner. That was the good news. However, the level was also above the point where it should have started to overflow and divert through the drain line. But the drain line was dry. After investigation, I learned that inside the tank, the drain line has an elbow directed upwards with a bell mouth, a flared connection to improve hydraulic efficiency. Thus the water level was actually on the verge of overflowing. Let’s call the tank 99% full. Next rain will tell!

See what I am talking about? The water level is nearly up to the bell nipple. Don Byrne and John Bartges will know what a bell nipple is.

And now, like the collected rainwater nearing the full mark, the house is on the verge of being complete!

When does a house become a home? You might ask when does a friend become a lover? I walked through the house this morning. I could feel the love, but it is an anticipatory sensation. Like the kid on a voyage who asks: “Are we there yet?” The reply comes back from the navigator: “Almost!”

Home is a very singular concept, but often transitory or illusory, like a mirage. It is a very personal place. For many, home is the place we are preparing for all our life. For others, home is family and friends, sharing time together. For me, it is both.

As the gravel trucks started to arrive this morning (to complete the driveway), I slipped out to my local coffee shop in Buffalo, the Coffee Nook. It is a comfortable and homey place, in the back of which is a library and reading room. Most of the books are teen fiction, romance and sci-fi, but they have a few that appeal to me, including The Medicine Woman of Galveston. On Thursdays, a group of women get together and play some kind of game with dominos. I met James the plumber there one morning and introduced them as my girlfriends.

On the way back to the wranch, I noticed what a beautiful country this is. The silent trees swaying in the breeze, dumbfounded cattle loitering in green pastures, the blue and red and yellow highlights of wildflowers in their final days of glory before the summer sun puts an end to their fleeting reign, the warm blue sky powdered here and there and which could be a menacing dark gray tomorrow.

And now I sit outside my trailer with a takeout coffee and a slice of Paula’s walnut raisin sour dough bread, toasted. The Beaty persists: Another gravel truck has just departed. Angel and his crew are digging trenches for the sprinklers. Sergio is setting the form for a last minute concrete pad behind my shop to work on my tractor or wash my gator. Norteño music wafts. I plan my chores: set the fridge on vacation mode to prevent the ice-maker from loading the freezer with ice, set the locks on all the doors, prep the space for the mattresses, make a few calls to follow up on rainwater pump and filters.

When I worked on a drilling rig, I noticed that the Company Man, that is, the oil company representative (read Big Boss) would come around and check on the mud or the cuttings, the drilled depth or rotary torque, the drill pipe and casing and wellhead inventory. Then he would go back to his air conditioned office, sit in his chair and read Zane Grey or John D MacDonald. Meanwhile, I was sweating (usually, sometimes freezing) cutting sacks of mud or scrambling up and down the derrick or trying to get stuck pipe free without parting the string and thinking: “I want that guys job!” So I went to USC and got my petroleum engineering degree (Class of ‘80) and eventually sat in the chair that was reserved for one person only, and that was the Company Man. Picture above is a view from my current Company Man’s chair. I see myself in some of those guys working out there – I wonder if they see themselves one day sitting in my chair.
I have to do all the work around here! This is the form for the pump house pad. I will be able to get water from the well or from the rainwater tank and supply the house. I will also have the sprinkler controls in the pump house, which will be insulated and heated for protection from the winter freezes.
Another load of gravel! Actually, it is slag from the local Nucor steel mill. The crushed limestone, which is more readily available, gets mushy in the rain and dusty when it is dry. The fine slag will create a thin layer on bottom, not unlike concrete, with the larger pieces forming a gravelly surface.
Paula’s kitchen. She loves, as I do, the open concept. Next Tuesday the propane tank will be installed and we will hook up and test the furnace, hot water heaters, gas dryer, and gas stove. I will place the bar stools around the island and the sectional sofa in the foreground. And throw some beer in my beverage cooler and maybe slip some prawns on the barbie.
The master bedroom. This poster bed is from Indonesia and after about 3 or 4 international moves, the posts were broken and re-glued numerous times and the canopy did not fit. Angel went to work on it and it looks great. I expect this will be its final resting place, so to speak. Paula bought the mattresses, bed linens and covers for the seven beds we will have at the wranch house. After a good cleanup this weekend, the bedrooms will be ready for the final touches.

Time to get on with my chores. No rest for the Company Man!

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