Showing posts with label Chapel Hill North Carolina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chapel Hill North Carolina. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

New Normal

     It's been eight months since my last post, and like everyone else, I'm still adjusting to a "new normal". Instead of being guided by US radar maps as I travel, I'm now guided by COVID hot spot maps . . .

      And instead of meetings with a homebuilder and contractors, I'm laying low, watching lumber prices go up, up, up . . .
Watching steel prices too . . . 


And instead of jostling for campground sites with hordes of travelers, I'm cat-sitting for them. This is Simon . . . YouTube has alot of good videos to amuse cats.


Before Simon and Dylan, there was Lily in Woodstock, Maryland, followed by Pete and Roger in Roanoke, Virginia. In Roanoke, I walked daily in a cemetery instead of busy hiking trails . . . hello Ms. Clatterbuck, hello Mr. Trinkle, hello Ola May . . . 


Last April, I planted a dozen baby Norway Spruce trees on my buildable lot . . . 


     See my vegetation above? I got a certified letter from the city claiming I had to mow my overgown vegetation, followed eleven days later by an email from a city erosion inspector claiming I had to sow seeds on my denuded lot. WTF? I pay Sport the Bush-hogger to mow every six weeks.

While I was tucked away in the North Carolina woods with Simon and Dylan . . . 

. . a surgeon fixed my Dupuytren's contracture.


And a dentist in Morehead City made my very first crown when an old filling broke.
Not a very blog-worthy past eight months, eh?

PS: After my cat-sit in Beaufort, NC, I camped at my lot in Salem, Virginia. The clover I planted is coming up nicely according to my 4-legged neighbors.



I was on a long waiting list with a driveway company in October and November. They finally excavated a six-inch deep 140' long construction driveway . . . .



. . . then I laid the weed control fabric . . . 


. . . . then they topped it with a foundation of 4" layer of big rocks and a surface layer of 2" of pugmill.


The construction driveway is now ready for construction vehicles!