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Note to self: More about Yucatan Mexico seasons and windy times

 It's dawned on me that during this time of year, we get a lot of wind.  I can tell because 1. I feel it.  2.  I see the trees swaying big and blowing.   3.  The windmill has to be shut down often because it keeps the water tank (See previous post Logan's Doggie Pool), full and overflowing. Looking back, it seems to have started getting windy about a month ago in the middle of February, and I remember that because I have several really big brush and tree piles, I need to burn, and I haven't felt safe about starting a fire that might spread to the other jungle. I've been noticing the past few days that it seems pretty still at night after the sun goes down.  And stays still until about 9 am when the sun has come up good.  The sun and the heat seem to make it more windy. Now, this is not to say there isn't always some breeze here in the Yucatan.  We are, after all, surrounded by the sea and the Gulf of Mexico and both of those always bring some breeze and the windmill

Note to Self: Beauty and Ugly seasons in Yucatan Mexico

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 I had a drone aerial friend come a few days ago and take some updated aerials for me so I could see the riding trails that we've worked hard on clearing the past four months.  Obviously, you get a different sense of perspective from a "bird's eye" view. After we were finished and I was reviewing them on my computer, and it dawned on me how ugly much of the land is right now. Much of it, away from the oasis of my home, is brown and looks bleak or dead.   And then I realized, it's because most of the trees have dropped their leaves.   The seasons here are much different from the USA.   I jokingly tell people that Yucatan has 3 seasons.  They are Not-so-hot, Hot, and Very hot.   Now the locals think that the "not-so-hot" season is winter.  It's funny to gringos because it simply means the daytime temperatures are usually in the high 70's to low 80's, (F) and the nighttime temperatures are in the mid 60's.   In the USA I guess we'd call

Logan my dog and his own doggie pool Yucatan Mexico

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  Click here for video I got a dog a week ago from a lady in Merida who had rescued him from an abusive owner 6 months ago.  She named him Logan, so I kept the name.  He's probably 2 years old and is a Belgian Malinois breed.  They have good protective instincts and also are good jumpers. It's just so quiet out here by myself most of the time, that I decided it would be nice to have a dog around.  Plus I can go to church on Sunday night and leave him here to guard the house and stuff. We've had to come to an understanding on a few matters.  1. the big swimming pool is the Human swimming pool and not for him. 2. The doggie pool is by the windmill. He gets so dirty and would just go and take a flying jump in and all the mud on his feet would come off in the pool for me to clean out.   I took him down to the windmill where there is a water tank and when he saw it, he jumped right him.  So now, I'm not only the only person in the pueblo who has a swimming pool, but I'm

A bat in my swimming pool today

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 I mentioned somewhere else in the blog that I have a very large cave near my house.  And about 6 weeks ago, I was sitting on the porch one night and pondering that I'd not been bitten by a mosquito since I've lived here.  In fact, I only remember one buzzing near my ear one time.  There are just not mosquitos.   There are however lots of mosquitoes in the pueblo 2.7 km away, and lots of them all over the Yucatan.  The cities like Merida are terrible with them.  But I'd had none.  Then one night a friend was visiting at night, and we were sitting on the front porch with the porch lights on, and we saw what appear to be a bird fly by in the dark.  My friend commented that it was a bat.  Wow!  I'd not thought about having them, and of course you typically don't see them since they only come out at night.    As I considered it, I realized they must be coming from the cave that is near my house.  It's huge with a tiny opening. There was my answer.  The bats eat all

My new sprinkler head towers

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  Click here for video I've been trying to keep my stuff water adequately since it's about to be the very hot season.  I had 3 sprinklers like you might stick in a residential yard.  But as my corn gets taller, I knew they weren't going to be able to reach over the tops of it. In Yucatan, a welder is called a blacksmith.  I had an idea and drew up a little tower that would be about 2meters tall that the sprinklers would sit on top of and shoot from a higher place. He charged me $80.00 to make me 3 of them.   Now it's made the watering job automatic and I don't have to have a man standing there moving the sprinkler around to get everything.  We just shoot these in a 360 circle and only have to move them twice in a day.

Panoramic view from top of Pyramid 1

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  We finally got cleared to the top of the small pyramid across from my house.  I'm sorry the video is not the best quality.  It was a very windy day.   At about the 40 second mark in the video, you can see the residue of some structure that some man made at the top.  This is definitely not nature made.   We have a lot more clearing to do, but this gives a very commanding view of my house across the road and the surrounding land.

Mayan Cottage industries and helping girls stay in school

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I have made no secret of my ambitions here in the Yucatan that I'm trying to empower these Mayan people to rise up from their extreme poverty and make a good income.  It is an unfortunate by-product of poverty that one of the first "luxuries" to be discarded is education.  In my eyes, education is the ultimate and best steppingstone out of poverty. In the Yucatan, children can go to school for free thru the 8th grade.  9th-12 though cost money.  It cost about 1,500 pesos per semester, which is about $75.00 USD.  That doesn't sound expensive, but in the pueblo where the average monthly income is only the equivalent of about $125.00 per month for a family, it is a fortune and unaffordable for many.   Hence, they drop out after the 8th grade, and the boys go to the field to work, or go to Merida for construction jobs.  The girls start looking for a boy to marry or get them pregnant and then marry.  Often times in the reverse order. There are barely any job opportunities

Finding 3 pyramids

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  Click here for video You would have to see the jungle here to appreciate how dense it could be.  I've spent months clearing much land for planting and also around my house so I can see out.   But before the clearing, you could not see 5 meters in front of your face. Across from where my house is, there is a 20-hectare tract that I'm starting to clean up and sell.  I have looked at it from my porch every day for months and saw nothing but dense trees.   But after my guys started into it from the driveway, I was inspecting their work and could see that the ground started rising pretty rapidly.  I sent them up the incline with machetes, and by gosh! There was a small pyramid.   Now lest you start thinking of Chichen Itza or Cheops, forget about it.  This one is about 15m tall.  It would have been typical for some important official or area ruler to have been buried in 500 years ago when this area was a big commerce center for the Mayan.   In any case, we've begun the clearin

Free cow manure Aloe Vera plants saved and leaves to put the plants to bed

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  Click here for video: I used to pay a supplier about 4.00 US a bag for cow manure.  I use a lot of it for asparagus, cucumbers, watermelons, and coconut trees I'm growing. I've recently found a cattle rancher who has large pens of feeder cattle and will give me all I want if I sent someone to pick it up and bag it.  Now I send Salvador with my truck every Thursday afternoon, and we gave a young high school boy a job every Thursday to pick it up for me.  Now every Friday morning Salador brings back to the ranch about 20 bags . . . and it's free. Also, I show some Aloe Vera that my guys mistakenly cut down when I asked them to clear a fence row.  Some friends told me to pick the plants up and stick back in wet, soggy soil and they'd live.  The sure did. Lastly, I explain here about why we are bagging up 100's of bags of leaves.   Yucatan has 3 seasons really.  Not so hot.  Hot.  And hot as hell.   We're about to go into the hot as hell season and so I've sho

Note to self: Feb 22 arrival of the bees in the thousands at my Yucatan Ranch

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I'm posting this so I can remember this time next year when the bees arrive to my yard.  I've been hearing this loud buzzing for a couple of days near my front porch of my house and didn't think a lot about it until it got so loud this morning I decided to walk out and try to see where they were coming from.  I don't have a lot of flowers near the porch and thought the buzzing much be coming from the trees.  I was right.  I do know that February is not a big month for collecting honey from the local hives.  That won't begin until the middle of April.  But I guess they are starting to work now to make the honey that will be collected in large quantities in April thru mid-June. Click here for video if you'd like to see.   Sorry.  It was too windy and I wasn't able to capture the buzzing.

Free fertilizer Caca de Vaca

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  I used to buy cow manure 100 bags at a time for about 4.00. 25kg each bag. Now I've found a cattleman who gives me all I want, and I gave a young boy a weekly job to pick it up.  I pay him the equivalent of $7.50 and he picks 20 bags, more or less, a week.  I let Salvador take my truck home on Thursdays, along with 20 empty bags, and he brings it back on Friday.    Big savings in $$$$$.  And all the free fertilizer I need forever.  Plus a young boy has a weekly job to look forward to. Win/Win

Yucatan Farm and Ranch - Cal Treatment for ants other than leaf cutters

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  A few days ago, I posted about how to keep leaf cutter ants away from harming your plants, shrubs, and trees.   As I said, there is no way to get rid of them.  All you can do is keep the population down, and take some preventive steps to keep them from attacking.   But they will go on. But there is something that can be done to keep the very tiny ants away from the fruit trees and shrubs, as the Mayans have done for many centuries.  It's a limestone powder that is mixed with water, and then put into a paste and applied directly to the trunks of the trees.  It doesn't harm the tree, and it doesn't harm the ants (though I'm not opposed to the latter).  What it does do is make the surface too slick and the ants cannot climb up or down. Here's a very short video of my fruit tree orchard with a fresh coat of Cal.  It does wash off over time from the rain.  But generally, will last many months.  If it rains the same day, you apply it, and the paste has not dried it will

Yucatan Mexico Farm and Ranch Predator 2 - The Leaf Cutter ants

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  Yucatan Mexico Farm and Ranch Predator 2 - The Leaf Cutter ants A few weeks ago, I posted about my attempt to rid my property of iguanas. While I would wish them all the best, I'd wish that for them anywhere else except here.  They are vegetable destroyers. My other great nemesis is the Leaf Cutter ant and more particularly their queens.  I have discovered, like the iguana, that it's a battle that I cannot win and eliminate them, because they just keep coming back.  But after they completely stripped 4 out of 7 of my gardenia shrubs a while back, I made it my mission to at least try to destroy them at the same rate the queens can build new colonies.   It is a continuous battle, and so far, I've been able to hold them back. As this video says, here in Yucatan, there are 2 kinds of people.  Those who have had leaf cutter ants attack their shrubs, trees, or plants, and those who will be attacked in the future by these dwarf-monsters-from-hell.   I see postings in different g

Yucatan Mexico Farm and Ranch Predator 1 - The iguana

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I speak to my co-workers often about the need to rid the ranch of any iguanas we can find.  3 of my 5 guys eat them and love them BBQ'd, so to kill them is just giving them some meat and not just killing the iguanas for the sake of killing. Click here for video about these 3 and 1 more we got afterward. Today I had to run into the pueblo to pick up a few things at the store and when I came back it was time for the guys to get off work.  They were all walking up to me, and I could see that one of them, Santos, was carrying something in one hand.  As he got closer, I could see it was 3 iguanas that he'd killed.  Actually, he'd "almost" killed them.   I wish I could have snapped a picture of the look on his face.  He was so proud of his accomplishment and doing something he knew would make me happy.  I give the guys a bounty of 10 pesos (about 50 cents) for each one they kill.   That's not a fortune, but it is a welcome extra for them.  Plus they get to take the

Planting and growing Coconut Palm trees in Yucatan Mexico

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 I'm raising coconut palm trees for future sale in 3 or 4 years.  For now, I use them as shade for my asparagus plants that I have growing.  I have 740 trees in containers growing before these.  Today added 48 more.  My goal is to have 1,000 trees growing by the end of March. Click here for video of soil mixing and bagging of the sprouted coconuts!

1st corn planting 2023 in Mayapan Yucatan Mexico

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 We planted 4 rows of corn today.  I'm actually about 2 weeks late to have 2 crops this year, but it will be fine. Click here for short video of planting Yucatan is a tropical climate, so we have 2 growing seasons a year, if you have water available.  The local Mayan farmers usually wait and plant their corn on June 1, because that is when the rainy season starts, and they need the water to get it up out of the ground and start to develop.  Since I have unlimited free water, and am sitting on an ocean of fresh water, I can plant a crop now, and in 4 months harvest it, about the end of May.  And then we can plant another crop on June 1 and let nature water, plus we make up what nature may be lacking in moisture. The plants are about 9 per M2 and since the beds are 1 meter wide, that means 3 across and then a row about every 33cm.   Compared to Midwest USA farmers, or my farmer friend from Belize and Minnesota, I am very small time.  But for a local farmer, this is a lot of corn in a

Note to self: Planted today 1.19.23 Forget-Me-Nots

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 Planted today 1.19.23 200 Forget-Me-Nots and 60 Albahaca

Note to self - 1.19.23 Transplanting Asparagus in Yucatan for retail sale

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 Maybe a reader would be interested.  But I'm making this note to myself to refer to later. I planted 500 asparagus plants in mid August 2022 in two rows in my raised-garden-beds.  Each row had 3 rows of asparagus with about 75 plants per row.  September nothing.  October 19th, 60 days later, they popped up overnight.   A month later, on November 21, 2022 they were about 30 cm tall (12"). You can see them in the rows between the coconut trees I'm growing (for sale).  The coconut trees give the plants partial daytime shade from the very hot Yucatan sun. On November 21, 2022 I decided to pursue growing asparagus for a 2nd income stream.  To raise as potted plants to sell retail in Merida in 3 years to expats and nationals who would like to buy a mature plant and begin cutting spears from the plants immediately.  2 mature plants would provide a couple of small family enough asparagus for their own needs to eat it as often as they'd like.   The mature, ready-to-harvest pla

A Mayan breakfast in Mayapan Yucatan Mexico

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  click here for video of my co-workers fixing, and eating a Mayan breakfas t  I've got 5 guys that work here with me 5.5 days a week. I could not ask for 5 co-workers that would be any more hardworking than these fellows. The man without a shirt is the "jefe" or superintendent of the others. 3 of the men only speak Mayan but Salvador, the jefe, is bilingual Mayan (first language) and Spanish. I'm learning Mayan but for now we communicate often with handsigns, my own Tex-Mex, or Google Translate in Spanish and English. These men all have their own cows or animals or crops to work, so they come to me at about 6:45 (rain or shine) and work until about 12:30 , Monday thru Saturday. There are other places where you can hire men for the full day, but not here. As part of their work routine, they stop at 10:00 and eat breakfast. There is no time clock punched or hours kept up with. It's just part of the deal, that they work, but they stop for breakfast for a

Transplanting Asparagus for future sales of mature plants 1.17.23

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 At the beginning of this video you can see some red Solo cups that I planted asparagus in 6 weeks ago.  They are up now and about 5 to 10 cm tall (2 to 4").  Today it's time to transplant them from the red cups to the blacks 1 liter nursery bags that will keep them for 2 or 3 years until I sell them as mature plants in Merida.    Then tomorrow we will repeat the process and plant new seeds in the red cups and transplant in about 6 weeks to the permanent bags. Click here to view video of transplanting. My goal is to have about 2,000 plants in bags each year, that I hope to sell in 3 years for about 500 pesos each ($25.00).   Then each year I will repeat the process and raise 2,000 more, so that starting in the 3rd year, I'll have 2,000 plants to sell retail each year or about 1,000,000 pesos per year in sales.   And additionally, I hope to harvest about 200 kg per day of spears to sell at the market in Oxkutzcab. As I have previously written, asparagus produces nothing in

Circus came to the pueblo

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 I drove into the village today to pick up some building materials and to my surprise a "circus" had come to town.   I use that term a bit loosely.  This is not what you might imagine with Ringling Brothers.   But for the pueblo residents and children it was fun.  Cost of admission:  About a dollar in pesos.  The "acts" were dog tricks, and chicken tricks and flying birds.  A few men and women doing tumbling.  No highwires, and definitely no elephants.  But still a break from the ordinary and all kids love clowns and dog tricks.  What can you expect after all for a dollar these days? 

my runt Banana trees in Yucatan

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 I mentioned this yesterday in a post, that I've got a few banana trees that have just not kept up with the others in growth.  I planted 20 in August and they were all about the same at about 1m high.   Most of them have gotten huge, and over 3m tall. But I've got a couple that are runts.  I'm starting to wonder if they're a different variety.  Maybe they make the baby bananas.  But I made this particular photo so I'd have a baseline of comparison and can look back in a month and see if the double dose of urine yesterday helped them to spring to life.  We'll see.

Making my own fertilizer from my urine in the Yucatan

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I recently read an article written to farmers in India about being able to fertilize their 45m2 garden with their own urine as the total source of fertilizer.  The more I researched it, I found it is true.  Urine is one of the last great natural resources we can get free from ourselves of Nitrogen, Potassium and Phosphates.   When you buy a bag of fertilizer at the store, you will usually see three numbers on the package.  Perhaps it would say: 17-17-17.  Those numbers represent the % of Nitrogen, Potassium and Phosphates. Today is the 12th, and I began saving my urine last Sunday the 8th.   By this morning I had accumulated almost 15 liters in plastic Coke Lite 600ml bottles.   I ran out of bottles so I decided to start applying to my fruit trees.  (I have 120 trees in my orchard.  20 each of 7 varieties.) When I finish the fruit trees, then I'll begina program for my 1,000 asparagus plants and then lastly my 500 coconut palm trees that are planted in containers for sale in 5 year

Pinup Girl Calendars even in Mexico

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 I can remember as a kid, seeing pinup girl calendars in the automotive shop my dad took the car to be worked on.  Some of them my dad made me turn away from, but most were just an attractive lady in a swimsuit or fancy dress.  I think they probably started during the war and became popular, and businesses would give them away to their clients to advertise their name all year long. A couple of days ago, my material supplier gave me one from his company.   Seems like some things go on regardless of the country you're in.  However, the Mexican version of it was certainly not risque.  In fact, I was telling my friend this morning I find this one quite beautiful and the lady serene.  

Asparagus growing in Yucatan

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 My asparagus that was planted in late August, continues to thrive and grow taller.  2 years before any spears to harvest, but since everyone I talked to told me that I'd never get it to germinate here, I'm pretty please with my results.   Tomorrow, we will prune them down to about 10cm (4 inches) tall.  I want the root system to continue to grow and not need to feed such a tall plant.  I will keep them at 10cm at least until October when the rainy season starts.    As I've mentioned, I have coconut palm trees in nursery bags growing next to them to give them partial shade during the day and keep the extreme heat and sun of Yucatan from stressing them. these plants at the rear of the bed, don't need the coconut trees to shade them because there is the large tree next to them to give them partial sunlight.

Drying palms leafs to build a thatched palapa roof in Yucatan

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 We're building a 2-car garage near the house, and I decided to do it in a palapa style.   Another posting will show the construction, but to get the palm leaves for the roof, we have to order them in advance so the man can go out and cut them.  When he cuts them, they are green, and we have to bring them here and lay them in full sun for a few days to dry out and be ready to put on the roof. I call them palm leaves.  The Spanish name is huano, but the Mayan name is xa'an.  It will take almost 1800 leaves to do the roof for a 2-car garage.  The xa'an are 7 pesos each of about 30 cents.  They should last for 10+ years. Click here for view of drying