Showing posts with label neighbors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label neighbors. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2011

Ginny's bees

[from Ginny in Maine, 8 July 2011, photos by Fabi]

Last March, while in my house, I complained that all the A/C units in the house were working well except for the master bedroom, which just couldn't seem to cool down the room. Controls were fiddled with, it was suggested that perhaps I would need a lesson in how to properly use the remote. Then I began to get complaints from renters in June who said that no matter what they did, they could never coax enough heat out of the bedroom unit. I was told that there was nothing wrong with the heater, that perhaps the tenant should be taught how to use the remote, that we had to remember to close the bedroom door, that the problem really was that I lived too far away and tended to worry, that possibly I did not know what it was like to live in the country.

As the decibel level of my fit-throwing began to rise between Maine and Cafayate, a visit was scheduled by Fabi and the builder and later that day I got a triumphant email to say that my heater was fixed and the problem revealed itself as a large beehive effectively immobilizing the blades of the heater.



Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Diane & Glen's plans for F27

landscaping plan

the customized Cedron floor plan

front & rear elevations

side elevations

4th of July

kudos to Charles for this photo

Gary & Beth's house

Nuestra casa en Argentina está casi lista. En invierno, las viñas están desnudos, y la temperatura en la noche es mas frio que 20F. Pero el campo de golf está todavía muy verde.

casa linda, casi lista

Saturday, July 2, 2011

living @ La Estancia

Mike & I plan to move into our new house on 1 September, 2011. We'll be living there until further notice.

LEC folks who currently plan to be in residence during the month of November include at least 6 families, altogether 15 people (Beth, Bevan, Carol, Collin, David, Gary, Jane, John, Kent, Linda, Margaret, Melissa, Mike, Sarah, & Tanya) at last count.

Any chance you'll be there, too?

our roofline

sunset on the Oregon coast

Charles is a remarkable photographer

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Gary on bitcoin

Another Take on Bitcoins
By Gary Kinghorn (owner, N-27)


I just read Doug and Louis’ weekly Conversations with Casey on Bitcoins. I had a very similar take initially, but I think Bitcoins are much more interesting than they are giving them credit for. I’ve actually spent a good amount of time understanding how this system is different than other alternative currency systems, and why it could have some merit at some point in the future, even if there are a number of “implementation details” to work out on the way to viability.

The first common misperception about Bitcoins is that they are backed by nothing, and hence that Goldmoney (also digital money, but backed by gold) must be superior. Or that Bitcoin is another form of fiat currency. This is a flawed argument if you flip it around and compare Bitcoins, not to Goldmoney, but to gold itself.

The value of gold is largely a reflection of the amount of work that is consumed in mining and refining it, along with its ideal suitability as “money”. A gold coin represents a large amount of land, highly refined, with the input of a great deal of energy, labor and capital. Similarly, Bitcoins are representative of the computing power, energy, and capital required to create them. A fast, expensive computer has to run for many days to create a Bitcoin. Just like most mining operations, it is a very difficult proposition to do profitably.

In fact, the creation of a Bitcoin is called “mining”*. There’s even a burgeoning industry of “mining consultants”, although the Bitcoin analogy of a Doug Casey has clearly not emerged yet. Bitcoin mining is risky, it’s somewhat random, and it’s very competitive between the number of people that are trying to mine at the same time. It’s probably never been a profitable venture, unless you assume greater prices in the future. So, in fact, the recent price rises that we’ve seen were not so much due to “greater fools” pursuing an unbacked currency, but a reflection of the more competitive nature of creating Bitcoins, the corresponding increases in computer cycles required to generate them, and the approximate costs of that computing power increasing. Naturally, the speculators come in to play that increase, amidst the early hoarders cashing out, and with the small size of an early market, you’ve got a formula for volatility, no question.

But if Bitcoins are “backed by nothing”, well, nothing backs gold either. It’s just a mineral dug up out of the ground with no inherent use other than jewelry. The fact that gold is not someone else’s liability is its supposed strength, and you can say the same about Bitcoins. Gold’s value relative to other strong conductors limits its industrial use considerably. The fact that gold looks better than a Bitcoin, and can also be used as adornment is an advantage that’s hard to argue; but it’s also true that its value as jewelry comes from its value as a rarity and its perceived value based on its ideal inherent properties as money. One could argue Bitcoins have all these same properties in terms of rarity, divisibility, convenience (OK, these are the implementation details that need to be worked out, but should be with time), and durability. When it comes to transporting wealth, say from the US to Argentina, would you rather try to carry $500,000 in gold past the TSA, or $500,000 in Bitcoins? So, maybe, in fact, they
are more portable than gold, certainly one aspect of their convenience. With a well-protected wallet (encrypted with a long password), they are 100% theft-proof.

As we all know, bad money drives out good money. In other words, Federal Reserve Notes are bad money, getting more and more worthless, and hence these are the first things to be used as currency (legal tender laws aside). The stuff that’s appreciating in value, like gold and silver is driven into hiding and hoarded by investors. They are not used as “currency”, at least today. But the real measure of Bitcoin value to society will not be determined today, but in the future when the fiat currencies have served their purpose and humanity is scrambling to find a replacement. How would Bitcoins have fared in the currency collapse in Argentina when local scrip was put into circulation and quickly forged? How would Bitcoins have helped in Zimbabwe last decade when people were digging in their backyard for gold dust to buy bread to survive? Today’s Bitcoins may have not solved the problems of these countries completely, but one can envision a future where even most third world citizens have a cell phone to carry a Bitcoin wallet, and every family has a home computer to mine a few hundredths of a Bitcoin per day.

In our dystopian future, very few people are going to have gold, or even silver to conduct many meaningful transactions. Bitcoins may well be the only currency at that point for the common man (the non-Casey subscribers), aside from the family silverware, neighborhood scrip and other local currencies with far deeper flaws than Bitcoins.

One of the main advantages to Bitcoins is that it is completely peer-to-peer. In a computer sense, this means that there is no “issuing authority”, no central repository, no managing group, etc. With amazing foresight, even the inventor has remained completely anonymous, adding something to the mystery and attraction of Bitcoins. There is no liberty dollar creator to arrest on trumped up tax charges, there’s no stockpile to confiscate, there’s no repository to raid. When compared to Goldmoney, who’s to say James Turk can’t be “taken out”, his vaults confiscated, or his database of users and transactions compromised. When compared to gold itself, there is no way the govt. could confiscate Bitcoins under any scenario, as long as there is electronic communication between users. If fiat currencies collapse, it’s very likely gold and silver could be completely taken out of the equation, but not Bitcoins. The volatility that gold and silver are going to go through are going to whipsaw most casual Americans through an emotional wringer on a day to day basis, for the ones that can get their hands on the precious metals. Just look at January 1980 for a preview. This may well be the case with Bitcoins, as we have already seen, but that is NOT to say gold and silver are always a “consistent store of value” by comparison.

Finally, the casual observer of Bitcoins is overlooking a real opportunity in my opinion. Let’s compare Bitcoins to facebook. Bitcoins have quickly garnered an almost religious-like cult following among its early adopters. Rather than dismiss this as an aberration, perhaps we should pause and better understand why. These are not just naïve videogamers and crypto-hackers. The adoption rate of Bitcoins could at some point in the future compare with the community of facebook users. Who wouldn’t have loved to have gotten in on the facebook craze back in the early Harvard days, by either being one of the early programmers, or being one of the first to benefit from the early market penetration and advertising models that were created.

Already the earliest Bitcoin miners (when there was comparatively little competition) are online millionaires, and are starting to cash out. If Bitcoin really becomes practical and widely used, even just for online purchases, the opportunities to add value with a simple service are going to be legion. The price of Bitcoins is going to go up by orders of magnitude, and the early adopters are going to (continue to) receive a windfall. Like any gold rush, there will be lots of losers, but there is also plenty of opportunity. The security flaw exposed in the largest exchange last weekend shows the need for a number of more stable, secure exchanges as the community grows. The lack of merchant terminals at your average Starbucks creates an opportunity for a simple payment app on a cell phone and a corresponding terminal at the merchant site. The lack of convertibility into physical dollars, or other currencies, in many locations is a clear opportunity to provide a valuable service. There is plenty of room for people who wish to provide capital, and a great opportunity for speculators as well. Think of investing in Bitcoin today as akin to investing in an early stage start-up in Silicon Valley, or a speculative mining venture. You still can’t rule out a four bagger.

Believe me, I know enough about Bitcoin to know all the downside risk, the limited viability, the potential for fraud, and the wild-west nature of this emerging technology. It may very well not survive at all. I know many of my arguments are hand-waving, but I’m playing the devil’s advocate, not because I have all the answers, but because I know nobody has the answers to rule out the future viability of this system. Would I invest much in it today? I doubt it, and I would only do it because I’m fully versed in as many issues as I can be. How would I invest if I did? Mining? Probably not. Speculation? Only in small amounts. Bitcoin-related services and products? Well, maybe, but I am a technologist and I can see a potential path to getting tech products off the ground. Are the risks great? Yes. But to dismiss Bitcoins as a “straw in the wind” is to be making a serious mistake in my opinion.

Truth be told, only last week I made my first small investment in Bitcoins after testing the viability of mining them for a couple of weeks. Unfortunately, I got some of my funds locked up in the now famous Mt.Gox security breach temporarily, but I expect all the funds to be recovered in short order, and it was a small test amount anyway. I am not deterred by this setback, and I don’t think the Bitcoin community will be for long. Other exchanges are operating normally and prices quickly returned. Mt. Gox is rolling back many of the trades in the unusual sell-off so the fraudulent “flash crash” will be undone. It’s just part of the learning process, and the growing pains in something as fundamentally important as a new currency.

[*Since somebody is bound to ask: What exactly do you mean “mining” a Bitcoin on a computer? Very simply, bitcoins are computer files that are cryptographic key blocks (a.k.a. a hash) that are assembled out of blocks of very large numbers. Putting together a hash block is not unlike a brute force cracking of a password. In mining, you have to try millions and millions of number blocks until you “find” the right one. The bitcoin network limits the amount of coins that can be minted to asymptotically approach 21,000,000 by the year 2030. Transactions may be common with 1/1000 or 1/10,000 of a coin as deflation seems built in by design. As computers get faster, and more people start mining, the blocks that are required to create a coin will correspondingly get longer and more difficult so that the mining rate is never exceeded. A good geologist in gold mining has a big advantage over a poor geologist, but in bitcoin everyone is equally looking in the dark so to speak, and it’s a bit more random, but you also don’t have the unpredictability of mining accidents, geopolitical instability or dependence on the price of oil. Want to try mining quickly on your own? Go to http://www.bitcoinplus.com and click on “Generate Bitcoin”, then “Start Generating” to start.

Earlier in my career as a network security guy, I worked at RSA, which designed and produced many of the foundational cryptographic algorithms used in these kinds of applications, which was what initially attracted me to study bitcoin, along with my interest in alternative currency systems, of course. Upon cursory research, the design is incredibly elegant and well thought out. From an engineering perspective alone, bitcoin is something like looking at the Hoover Dam for an industrial engineer. It’s a testimony to somebody’s great design and the belief in that design of a large and growing community of talented programmers in the open source community, and throughout the world.]

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Penny: from Houston

Por la nube de cenizas, se esperan nuevas cancelaciones de vuelos en Ezeiza y Aeroparque (Due to the ash cloud, new cancelations are expected at Ezeiza y Jorge Newbery)

[Thursday night]

Despite checking hourly for flight updates to BA (and told by Continental that flights to BA were leaving on schedule), I find myself stuck in Houston airport . . . a predicament that I went to great lengths to avoid. I was told, upon arrival in Houston, that I should have been told of the flight cancellations at check-in (duh) instead of being given a boarding pass for the BA flight, so my expenses and hotel have been taken care of, however, I am furious beyond words. There was no indication from Continental that the flight may not be going – otherwise I would have stayed in Vancouver!

Now there is no availability to BA for the foreseeable future and no way home to Vancouver again tonight. I cannot get a confirmed flight on any airline from North America to BA until Tuesday 14th so . . . it looks like I may be going back to Vancouver tomorrow. I have hung on here in Houston for a couple of days because I really need to get to Cafayate to see my house, and I really want to go furniture shopping. Furthermore, my schedule does not allow for another trip until mid-July. Not sure what my next move is . . .

[Friday morning]

Interior painting has started, and the wood floor will be laid shortly thereafter. After much testing and sampling, I will be choosing exterior paint and interior wood finish on this trip. I selected several interior colours on my last trip and have been eliminating them as test patches go up on the wall, and I see the effects of light, etc. (Beware of the green light cast by the vineyards and golf course, and take several photos, flash on/off, etc.)

Did I mention that I am dressed for BA in the winter, and it is a very humid 35C here, and that the rooms at the Airport Marriott are not nearly as nice as the lobby would suggest? I have so much to accomplish this trip . . . still hoping to get out tonight.

[later on Friday morning]

Wow! I literally just heard from the Continental Concierge that I have a confirmed seat on tonight's flight if EZE re-opens. I was quite surprised by this because I am travelling on points . . . Continental bumped someone with an upgrade back down so that I could get a seat!

According to the BA Herald, the "Crisis Committee" just met in BA and airports may reopen at 6pm. If I cannot get out tonight, Continental will fly me home to re-group.

[Friday afternoon]

Thanks to the "Crisis Committee" in BA, flight tonight is still a go.

[later on Friday afternoon]

Just sang "O Canada" in the Houston Airport sportsbar.

[even later]

Onboard flight CO53 to BA !!!!


wine storage



parilla cabinetry

Monday, June 6, 2011

Tanya & Bevan in Cafayate & Salta

[email & pix from Tanya & Bevan's recent visit to La Estancia]

donkeys @ the gate

We were caught for an extra night in Cafayate because both gas stations were out of nafta! Although the delivery truck was expected at 4pm on Sunday, it did not arrive until around 8am on Monday morning. We were happy that we didn't have a flight to catch and were not too upset seeing that there are much worse places to be stuck! We now will always leave Salta with a full tank and fill up when we arrive in Cafayate.

Heath Club desserts

The food at the clubhouse continues to improve. We had an amazing lunch there with some beautiful desserts! Bevan and I also had the opportunity to meet some wonderful people this trip - both people living in the town, owners, and some potential owners.

In Salta, we went mattress shopping and found things very expensive. The Simmons Beautyrest are around 10-16,000P and the Argentine brand, Cardeuse, were around 10K Pesos for their higher end mattresses with a pillow top. If you aren't able to tolerate really firm mattresses, I would suggest going with the top of the line Cardeuse or the Simmons.

Sunday, June 5, 2011

David & Deirdre's preliminary site plan

site is in the N-section, west of Charles & TC, slightly south of the river

Saturday, June 4, 2011

tiny houses

Who will build a tiny house? Why not visit Tiny House Blog for ideas?

Today, THB's featured home is located in Uruguay, slightly rundown, Matt, but worth a look?

might be dug up & put on a truck . . .

I don't know how tiny a house needs to be to be classified as tiny, but under 500 square feet (approx. 50 square meters) makes sense to me.

To live in a container that you could buy & ship straight to your lot, check out ecopods:

an ecopod container house

If you'd rather live in a sphere or install a sphere for your treehouse, visit freespiritspheres:

a sphere house

You could even build your house from a whisky vat or a glider:

converted Horsa glider

Check out Tiny House Blog's photo gallery for more ideas.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Jennifer, David & Marco: house plans

Jennifer, David, & Marco larking it up Mexican style

Jennifer, David, & their 14-year-old son Marco, New Zealanders for now, are celebrating the beginning of their house construction on lot E40. They chose the Hortensia semi-custom design from Calchaqui Homes.

Here's a reminder of where E40 sits on the master plan. Notice that the lot has road on three sides, an acequia running through, & is a very short walking distance to the Fitness Club & the Heath Club.



Below are elevations, floor plan, & preliminary landscaping. In the landscaping, ignore the guest house & pool, because they're future possibilities.

East (front of house) & South views

West (back of house) & North elevations



Layout

House siting & preliminary landscaping

Sunday, May 22, 2011

what's it like to build: key questions

Some things we learned along the way:

Appliances: do the shopping yourself. Salta had everything we wanted, i.e., dishwasher, garbage disposal, kitchen stove, microwave oven, refrigerator, washer, dryer, wine refrigerator (see below). Be aware that standard kitchen stoves have burners with low BTU ratings. We bought our kitchen stove at a restaurant supply store; the lowest-rated burner has a higher BTU rating than any of the burners on a standard stove. We chose a combination washer/dryer because with only two of us, that's a more economic solution, plus we have a tender (walled-in-but-unroofed clothes drying area) just outside the exterior laundry room door. Choose what you want as early as possible & ask CH to buy & store them so that you don't pay more later due to inflation. Also, that way the builder & cabinet maker know exactly what size to leave for each appliance.

Cabinetry: we went with standard sizes (instead of custom) because it was more economical. Because our kitchen counters are deeper in some places than the standard lower cabinets, the builder built pony walls between the real kitchen wall & the back of the cabinets.

Closets: if you don't want your closets (clothes closets, hall closets, linen closets, pantry) to have raised floors, say so. The Argentine standard seems to be closet floors raised 2-3" above the real floor. We didn't see the point.

Construction Bid: ours did not include appliances, cabinets (unless built by our builder's carpenter), heating & air conditioning, lighting. Landscaping was a separate bid.


Door & Window Glass: we went with DVH, Doble Vidrio Hermético, which means double-paned windows. It's an energy-saving way to keep the house warmer in winter, cooler in summer.

Door & Window Screens: yes, you need them; flies & mosquitoes can be very annoying at certain times of year. We could not obtain the kind of fiberglass screening we're used to in the US, so we're going with very fine mesh metal screening, which comes in one color, silver, which will be painted black so that it does not reflect the sunlight.

Driveway: we don't want gravel & couldn't afford pavers, so we're going with asphalt; we've asked for our driveway to be paved the next time La Estancia has a road-paving event.

Electrical switches & outlets: find what you like on the Internet & specify the brand & model. They are different from what we're used to. Lots of switch models have lights in them, which we did not want (I like it dark at night). Note that switch plates are oriented vertically, not horizontally, so if you have more than one switch in a plate, specify above & below, not left & right. Also, request at least two outlets in each outlet plate (or you may not get two).

Fans: bathroom exhaust fans: no, an open window will dry the bathroom out in short order; kitchen stove hood & fan: no, we have good ventilation in the kitchen & throughout the house; ceiling fans: yes, we'll have 7: 3 in the great room, 1 in each of the 2 bedrooms, 2 in the west-looking outside patio. Unless you buy the brand of ceiling fan that's in the Heath Club, ceiling fans are cheap.

Granite: we found what we wanted in Buenos Aires, & then CH had the Salta firm special order our choices.

Handles (cabinets, doors, windows): we chose them over the Internet.

Heating & Cooling: turns out the heating/cooling wall-mounted heat pump units don't heat when it's really cold out. We chose not to go with radiant floor heating because I'm hot-blooded & didn't want to suffer the slow cool-down. We chose Argentine-standard radiator units in each room. A single calefón (instant hot water heater) both supplements (if necessary) our solar hot water & has a separate flow system that heats the water for the radiators. We chose cooling-only wall-mounted AC units, which are less expensive than the heating/cooling heat pump units. Each of these wall-mounted units, whether they are for heating/cooling or just cooling, have an exterior unit along with the interior unit. Decide where you want the exterior units unless you don't mind the noise they'll make. We halved the recommended number of radiator units because we'll also have a wood stove in the great room. We halved the recommended number of AC units because Cafayate locals told us that even in a very hot year, you only need AC about 20 days a year. Besides, we have all those ceiling fans.

the radiators we'll have look something like this


Heights: be sure you specify the heights of your clothes hanging bars, countertops, showerheads, towel rods, wall lights (interior & exterior), etc. Argentine standards may not be what you're used to.

Internet connection: wireless doesn't travel well through concrete & rebar. Specify carefully where you want Internet connection points, & recognize that one will not be enough. We have three: great room, master bedroom, upstairs room.

Keys & Locks: unless you want those long black keys, a different one for every lock, ask for Kallay locks & Yale-style keys. We'll have all our locks keyed to a single key.

Lighting: it's good to have your lighting fixtures chosen by the time the walls are up because that's when they lay in the wiring. In fact, they laid in all the ceiling wiring for our first floor before they set the second floor on top of it. We chose all our lighting from a single store in Buenos Aires because we were there & we liked the salesperson. I'm sure we could have found everything in Salta, too. We had no problem choosing fixtures that use low-energy bulbs.

Plumbing fixtures, sinks, & tile: we chose them over the Internet.

Solar Hot Water: CH is working with the vendor we chose, so they now know how this vendor's design works. Decide early if you want solar hot water & whether you want the hot water tank(s) on the roof because that will affect roof design. Roof tanks are the cheapest & most efficient solution, but the tanks must be hidden from view, another design issue. Because we found our solar hot water vendor late in our construction process, we're going with the hot water tank in our mechanical room.

Wine Storage: We don't understand the wine storage areas/rooms designed into the CH houses; who keeps wine at ambient temperature? We bought a 120-bottle wine-storage refrigerator & designed a spot for it in our laundry room.

I'm sure you have topics I haven't addressed. E-me with questions & I'll post more.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

David & Nadine share photos from Harvest Celebration 2011

Nadine & David @ their lot

David & Nadine

David, Nadine, Penny, Carol, & Reg @ the Heath Club

Peter & Susan, Wendie @ the next table, @ the Heath Club/td>

Peter picks his grapes

Susan loves her grapes

Sara takes advantage of her height

Bill & Cecilia speaking @ the wine picking & lunch event

Glenn & Diane

Nicole, Paden, & Forrest

Shirley & Lawrence

Jim, Wendie, Nadine, & David on the house tour

Wendie, Nicole, John, Bill, & Robin on the house tour

Mike & Marta



oh, food

oh, light
David, Robin, Bill, & Nadine

Jack, Robin, & Bill

JJ, TC, Tom, & Charles

Nadine sitting someplace wonderful where I've not been