Card Night

Yesterday, I headed over to Laura’s place to join her and Caroline for a game or two of ‘hand and foot canasta’, a weekly event.

I asked Caroline if the unpleasant man had come to talk to her about my lot. Yes. He was very rude to her and couldn’t conceive that he had essentially been taken by the guy he bought the house from. That will teach him to buy a lot without checking the survey map.

There is NO doubt of my lot’s boundaries and that it was the RM’s to sell to Caroline and Charles to sell to me. I am not in a land/property line dispute, and I doubt I’ll hear anything more about this.

Canasta was heaps of fun and even though the rules were overwhelming, I picked it up fairly quickly. I whooped my friends’ butts on the first round and then Caroline cleaned up on the second. Caroline left around 11:00 and then Laura and I chatted for a good while longer. The saying is true, “there are no strangers, just friends you haven’t met yet.”

I’ve got tons of work to do again this weekend, but I still want to get my yard cleaned up a little of all the leaves. I’ll head over to Laura’s in a little bit to borrow a lawn rake. Scratch that, Charles just brought me one. Ooh, and I’m invited to dinner tomorrow!

Here’s what I’ve come up with as to the eventual layout of my property:

rv pad

It is drawn to scale. The driveway area is 40’x20′. The RV pad area is 12’x80′. I’ve realised now that that’s too narrow as I have the plan drawn right to the property, so it’ll likely become 20’x80′ and everything else will shift over 8′. I then have a strip of grass and a 4′-wide path running down the property (I’m thinking of pavers to connect the strip to the RV pad area).

The brown square is a 10’x10′ structure, the biggest I can have without increasing my property taxes.

This sketch really helps me see the proportions and potential of this narrow strip of land. Miranda would be backed up into the corner and then another RV could back in ahead of her. There would be plenty of driveway to make it easy to come into the entrance and swing into the RV pad strip.

I have trees encroaching on the green lawned area, so leaving it as would be the least amount of work. This sketch also shows that I have more than enough space for a larger structure should I ever decide to add one.

I found a gravel calculator that puts my gravel costs at about $350, which seems very low to me, so I need to double check the math. I want to put down 6″ of material over about 2,500 square feet, and gravel is currently $7/yard. If that’s accurate, then that’s awesome! Of course, I’d also have to hire someone with a tractor to move the stuff around and pack it down to make a level surface.

The RM got back to me about my questions and the gist of it was, “You’re on your own. Ask around for someone who knows where to tap into the water lines and don’t bother asking for permits.”

I am looking at $116.25 to get water and garbage collection for three months, which is about how long I’ll be here when I get back in July. So that’s less than $250 for a whole summer.

Tomorrow, I’ll ask Caroline and Charles the name of the local handy guy who knows where all the water lines are so I can call and get an idea of how much it would cost to get a tap here. This is such a small lot that it doesn’t matter where the tap ends up at this point as I have more than enough hose to get from Miranda to any point. My thinking is to have the tap put on right at the property line so I have to run less pipe and spend less money.

Miranda being parked in the corner is not negotiable for a number of reasons. First of all, I only care about the view out of my passenger side, so it makes sense to park with the driver’s side against the treeline so I can look out over the property. I also get more of a rear view from that corner than from any other spot on the lot. Finally, the power pole is right there so I could get a metre and outlets installed right there.

This plan is going to be done in stages as money frees up. I think the order of stages will be water, shed, gravel, power.

*glances at the clock* Eep, 11:00 a.m. and I haven’t done any work today! Time to get cracking!

Well, That Threw Me Off

Moments ago, a guy knocked on my door and the following conversation ensued:

Me: Yes?
Man: Who owns this lot?
Me: I do.
Man: Is that so? The guy who sold me the place next door told me my land extends right to those trees, so it includes this lot.
Me: That is incorrect. I have a deed duly registered with the government of Saskatchewan.
Man: Is that so? Who sold it to you?
Me: Caroline and Charles. Caroline told me this week that there were some assumptions about the ownership of this lot, but it clearly belonged to no one. They bought it, and several other vacant lots, from the RM and sold it to me.
Man: Is that so? I’m going to talk to Charles about this.

Now, I know I am the rightful owner of this land and that Caroline and Charles will set this guy straight, but that was rather unnerving!

Visiting the Post Lean-To

This morning, I walked across the village to the ‘post office’, which is a lean-to attached to someone’s house. You walk into the lean-to and there are some PO boxes, clutter, and a door with a bell. The sign outside said the counter hours were about 8:30 to 1:15, so being within those hours, I rang the bell.

A gentleman quickly answered, opening the top of the door, and apologized, saying the post master had stepped out. I wanted to get a PO box, mail two letters, and advise the post master that I had an Amazon package sent general delivery. He handed me a notepad on which to write my name and ‘address’ (legal land description plus descriptive description). I added a note about the incoming package and handed back the notepad and my two letters. My business was essentially done. I’ll try back Monday and see if there is a box ready for me.

It was a lovely stroll even though the sky was spitting. We’re in a grey stretch and power is becoming a concern. But once May is done, it’ll be endless sunshine into the fall, so I just need to hang in there.

Exploring the Environs

I still have tons of work to do this evening, but I took the afternoon off to get some fresh air. I started by walking around the village. Caroline told me that in the not so distant past, this village was the head of a big insurance company (its building now an apartment complex right across from my lot) and actually had a few businesses.

There are signs of this hey day all over, from a crumbling church to a large community hall, never mind the frost damaged sidewalks. There is also a swimming hole attached to a building with public showers and toilets. I look forward to that opening. The exterior of the building is a little scary, but if the showers are clean, they will be much appreciated.

I walked out to the cemetery and will need to go back out there with a camera, the spot being so pretty. The cemetery is obviously well tended. The bulk of the names on the headstones are French-Canadian as this is a French-Canadian community. I had a look at some of the other lots for sale, each bigger and more beautiful than the next, but I know I made the right choice. And a good view is just a block away!

Now, I wasn’t going to share this next tidbit, but, really, it’s too good not to. The majority of the residents of this community have one of two last names. The first last name is that of my maternal grand-mother. The other last name is that of my maternal grand-father, so the name of just about all my relatives on my mother’s side. WHAT?! That is a really weird coincidence. The names are common, but we’ve done the genealogy and we all appear to come from the same 17th century immigrants. So I am likely a distant blood relation of many of my neighbours. How weird is that?

Finally, I really did intend to keep the name of the village private, but there is a nearby attraction that shares the village’s name and which I simply cannot hide from the world, it is so wondrous. It’s only 2KM away, albeit uphill, so it could be a good place to hike to once or twice a week.

Some of you may remember the wonderful gift I got from Jody for my third RVing anniversary, a trip to Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park. This park has petroglyphs carved into vertical rock faces.

Well, there are some much rare petroglyphs in North America, ones written on horizontal surfaces. One such location is right here, at the St Victor Petroglyphs Historical Park.

It’s a bumpy drive up to the petroglyphs (so I glad I have my truck because even with it I almost lost my fillings). The petroglyphs are carved into sandstone and very faint. Truth be told, I couldn’t see anything today and made note of the idea conditions (rain or dusk) to see them. Standing up there, I felt the same magical connection to the world around me that I did at Writing-On-Stone and in the Badlands. These are places of immense power.

The pictures below are of the landscapes as seen from the petroglyph locations, mostly to prove to Caroline that I am NOT in stereotypical flat prairie landscapes. 🙂 Also, the crocuses were out!

Haven: Now With Internet, Kind Of

My booster package arrived today. No exclamation points because I want to have WORDS with Wilson electronics.

I ordered a Sleek signal booster with a longer magnet mount antenna.

I read all the literature and made sure to ask Andy if I needed anything else. Well, SURPRISE, the Sleek and the antenna both have connectors that cannot be joined them together! I want to meet the moron who had that bright idea. I thought they were male connectors, but they are actually SMA female and FME female.

So until I find a connector and get it out here, I am limited to the little stubby antenna that comes with the Sleek. I get about 1.5 bars with it. Andy recommends a pizza pan to use as a mount for an RV rubber roof. Being me, I found a pizza pan that isn’t magnetic. But of course. I tried my cast iron skillet, but didn’t get much of a signal. The next idea was to park the truck next to the office and stick the stubby antenna on its roof. I’m now trying a pot on the roof and getting a more steady signal.

The good news is that the Sleek does work and that I do have slooooooooooow internet at home. The bad news is that I really need the longer antenna and I have no immediate way of using it Being 20 miles from civilization and having spent $190, I am feeling rather pissed off about that.