What you lookin at?

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

The Hills Are Alive



That old saying, Time Flies When You’re Having Fun, is just as true now as it ever was. At least for me. I checked in on the rant and realized that I hadn’t updated it since July 2014. Wow!

Since then we found a beautiful piece of property on top of a mountain and built a house there. We are near Horseshoe Bend, Idaho, about 25 miles north of Boise.  We moved in just almost exactly 11 months ago. We haven’t stopped moving since.

I look out of my office window and below is a small valley, you might call it a mini-dell. The other side slopes up very steeply to a ridge line that makes the sun go down an hour earlier than where it’s mostly flat. In the bottom of the little valley and due west is my Cousin Steve’s house. It’s a hundred feet below my elevation, I guess (have to measure it someday).  I swear, in my prime, I could hit a golf ball to his front yard with a stiff tail wind. 450 yards I suppose? (I am taking it for granted that I would hit it on the screws, the tail wind is 30mph and I’m getting every bit of 100’ of drop)

On the left, towards the south end of the little valley is my cousin’s brother-in-law Allen’s new house. It finished about the same time as ours. He has a spring fed pond in front of his place. Even though the house is 4000+ square feet, it is just a vacation home at this point. 

The three houses are all that is here, and ever will be. Between me, my cousin and Allen, we own all the land. Mine is just a little 6.5 acres piece.  And that’s just fine by me. I look down on both of them by golly! We joke that we are starting a compound, which in Idaho can have some significant meaning that you are all free to construe however you wish.

Below is a picture of our house, with Steve’s house to the right and Allen’s is straight away dead center. The picture was taken a bit over a year ago, just before we moved in. 



So yesterday, I was sitting at my desk working, on a conference call in fact, when I looked out of my window to see about 20 wild turkeys cross Steve’s yard and work their way down hill, to the right in the photo above. I’ve seen turkeys many times before here, but it is still cool. About an hour later I watched 6 deer come out of the woods behind Steve’s house and work their way across his yard and start up my hill. They usually split left or right around my house, though it is not unusual to see them in the yard (driveway, patio, looking in the bedroom window, and “Eating The Flowers Out Of The Pots). 

 On their way up the hill they stopped on the little bench below my office and all turned looking intently back across the valley. What, I wondered, are they looking at? I started looking around, and then caught a flash of movement low down on the ridge across the way. Coyote! He was a big fat fluffy one. The winter had been kind to him. (The deer too, which are looking more shiny and sleek than this time last year, much better than that rough coated flower thief shown above). I swear he is the same guy Cheryl and I watched catch a mouse in a snow storm just 20 yards or so from my office window a couple of months ago.  Here he is with the mouse two gulps before it was gone.



That’s the way it goes around here. I’ve seen elk wander through our valley. Antelope, too, believe it or not. Badgers, marmots, kestrels and hawks are all prevalent. A heron nests in one of the trees in the valley, and we are constantly buzzed by geese and ducks. The quail are forever skittering here and there and beyond.

Cattle wander in the dozens. I get a huge tax break on the 5.5 acres my house is not sitting on to let the free range cattle have access to my property. But I sometimes wonder if it is worth it. They are extremely destructive. They will eat anything that is green, including the wife’s pansies and violets (which I guess are more colors than green), poop on everything else, and make a mire out of any soft ground. There is one big bull that likes to dig giant holes next to the roads, flipping the dirt onto the road and creating quite an obstacle. Piles of dirt! Steve calls him a knucklehead. I think he’s a pain in the ass! 

But for all this game, there is no game hunting. Steve, the majority landowner and developer—who as such got to the write the CC&Rs for the HOA—will not allow hunting. It causes resentment with many of the locals, who think Steve is keeping all the prime hunting to himself. It is not true. Steve is a hunter himself, occasionally bagging a bull elk of local terrain.  It's just that the animals on his property are like furry relatives and he doesn't want them molested. He would not let Allen kill the marmot that dug a hole under his new house and set up a cozy marmot condo in the basement. No, rather than shoot the little pest, we had to catch him and transport him 10 miles across the ridge to another mountain for release. I figure it took the critter less than a day to get back.

We sold the motorcycles when we moved in. We have a mile of winding, steep in places, dirt and gravel road once we leave some questionable paved road to get to our house. That combination of road and 700 hundred pounds of big cruiser do not play well together. Someone was going to go down, and it was going to hurt. Cheryl said “sell ‘em, I want a tractor!” And so we did. Here is here new baby.





This is going on a bit, and there is still much to tell. But, for now, it is enough to say we are heading toward retirement.  Just a few years left. Getting the ducks lined up, the house in order, the finances fleshed out and the plans laid.