This week the workers were laying more and more blocks, and slowly the forms of the rooms began to take shape. Directly in front in this picture is the garage.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Week Five Pictures
This week the workers were laying more and more blocks, and slowly the forms of the rooms began to take shape. Directly in front in this picture is the garage.
Monday, April 21, 2008
Week Four
This picture shows what will be the back of our house (and a Coca-Cola truck). On the left will be our dining room, and on the right our living room. Where the guy is standing, there'll be a patio / deck / porch / whatever. The blocks shown in this picture rise to the height of the eventual floor.
Well, eventually we'll have this view from our bedroom. You can see the Gulf of Nicoya as well as the Nicoya Peninsula in the distance (that's where the province Guanacaste is located).
For a person used to wood-frame houses, this is interesting. Here is a corner of our dining room. They build all the walls, and then they pour the steel-reinforced concrete columns at the end.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
Oops
--Ryan
Sunday, April 13, 2008
Week Three
Tuesday, April 8, 2008: Here you can see that they're starting to get some of the steel up for the reinforced columns.
The foundations for the columns. The guy in the tan shirt is Keylor, the contractor who's building our house.
Harvey working on getting the columns aligned just right.
It's a bit of a maze of steel, but I guess that 's the point now, isn't it?
Columns rising into the air. They look really, really huge in real life.
Saturday, April 12, 2008: More and more steel is rising into the air.
A sea of steel.
How's this for current? Here I am this morning, placing the first official block of our new house.
Here I look like my thumb has its own thumb.
Angela placing the official second block (we were going to put the first one together, but the workers didn't feel too confident about taking a photo).
A good foundation.
Adding a third block, for good measure. (Not pictured: Probably about five minutes after we left, the workers surely removed and replaced our three stones to make up for our incompetence). Anyhow, check back next week, and I'll put some more pictures up!
Sunday, April 6, 2008
"So Where’s All That Money Coming From?" – A Too-Much-Information Chronicle
Not that this is really something you necessarily need to know, but it’s rather inexpensive to build a house in
To pay our contractor and to pay for the materials we buy, we’ve been using cash so far. I know that may sound strange, but apparently, it’s the best way to get good prices around here. No one here has or accepts checks (in fact, the girl at the bank flat-out refused to open a checking account for us). Additionally, most places, if they do accept credit cards, they apply extra charges which can rack up the cost of materials by 10% or so. All of this translates into cold, hard cash. Or, as in the case of colones, which is
This issue is more complicated because most of my money is still in my account in the
Fortunately, the company I work for is located in a free trade zone or a duty free zone…I’m not really sure what it’s called, but the bottom line is they look in your car’s trunk when you leave, and while you’re anywhere in the commercial park, you have to wear a badge that makes you look like a big tool. But, the ATM is inside of my company’s building, so it’s probably the safest ATM in the entire country (which IS actually saying a lot, if ATM robbery reports on the news are to be believed).
So, when we need money for construction, I go to the ATM, take out 250,000 colones (about $500), which appears to be the maximum that I’m allowed to get in one day. I quickly snatch the money, fold it, and cram it into my pocket. I then head toward the bathroom, find a stall, lock the door, and sit down. This is where it gets weird. In my other pocket, I’ve already placed a napkin and a rubber band (wow, this is turning into a totally heroin-y story!). I count the money, just to make sure it’s all there. It always is, which is somewhat remarkable, due to the colon’s notoriety for being a physically flimsy bill that is prone to mildew and ill odors; I’m just surprised that the mechanical parts of the ATM’s bill counting machine would not have more problems with this currency.
When I know it’s all there, I carefully wrap the napkin around the money. I then double-wrap the rubber band around the bundle. Then I stick it in the front of my underwear. Of course! I know this may sound totally weird, but it was a technique that developed through trial and error over a long time. I used to carry my money in my shoe, like when I had to go pay my immigration lawyer in San Jose, but I noticed that that technique left me with a slight gangsta limp and a sore foot at the end of the day, to say nothing of the subtle humiliation that comes from handing a lawyer a slightly moist and smelly wad of bills.
That, of course, could possibly explain the use of the napkin, but it’s actually not to absorb sweat; instead, I do it to protect my own skin, as there are few things I would like less than a moldy paper-cut on my wang. And the rubber band keeps all the money in place; I’d feel somewhat like a hooker if I pulled forward my drawers to find a disorganized and scattered collection of large-denomination bills. So, the napkin and rubber band are a must. If you have tight-fitting drawers, you can put the stash against your thigh, right about where your front pants pocket would go. Tight-fitting? Oh, I’d recommend boxer briefs. Conventional boxers are obviously out of the question, and bikini briefs are just too small (and pervy) to get the job done. And it shouldn’t be just any style of boxer brief. I’ve found that the American Hanes and Fruit of the Loom just aren’t nad-squeezingly adequate; for our purposes, you’ll have to look to the Old Country and track down some good quality tight-weave Eurotrash boxer briefs. Try
If all else fails, you can stow the “package” of money by placing it under your pants button, and further secure it with the help of a tight belt over that. Then top all that with a some ribbon, a bow, some whipped cream, a cherry, and a small cocktail umbrella. This whole process should obviously be done near the end of the day, because it’s not comfortable, mentally or physically, having that much cash bouncing around so close to your junk.
From there, it’s probably smooth sailing. If you’ve got a car, you can basically head right home. If you’ve got to wait at a bus stop like a loser, you can take comfort in the fact that at least if you’re mugged, the homophobic nature of most Latin American criminals will probably mean that although they may steal your wallet, they probably won’t be looking to do a pat-down in your groinital area.
Anyhow, the only reason I mention this is because the other day, as I was securing my cluster of currency to my body much like a police informant secures his hidden microphone, I asked myself, “Man, I wonder if paying for house construction is this complicated in the U.S.” And my immediate answer was, “No, of course not. I’d just use a check.” Oh well, different strokes for different folks, I guess.
Week Two
Here's the next photo for your flipbook. This is from April 3, 2008. Still mainly ditches and blocks.
The septic tank was built the other day. Being from a place that generally has plumbing linked to a sewer system, I must confess that I have no idea how a septic tank works. Or, at least I didn't until yesterday, when Harvey took a good half hour to explain how they work while I got a sunburn. It's OK, though, because knowledge is power.
A view of the foundation trenches where they'll put the steel-reinforced cement. The rooms look really, really tiny when you're just using the ditches as reference, so Angela and I keep freaking out a bit, wondering if we'll be able to fit into our Hobbit House. The coffin-shaped mound to the left of the image, for example, is supposed to be our guest bathroom. I'm wondering how they'll fit a toilet brush in there, let alone a shower...
Another picture for your flip-book. This is from April 5, 2008. In the foreground are Angela and her brother Arnoldo. (Oh, and by the way, you probably figured this out, but if the image is small or crappy, try clicking on it, and you'll be able to see a larger version)