There’s nothing like a deadline to focus the mind. Some
people hate ‘em – I love ‘em (as long as there is some chances of getting past
the line alive).
My little project in Spain is coming to a climax, and the
opening party is just a few days away. I finished the stonework on the last
visit to Spain and built the ‘shed’ on the terrace to house the electric and
water essentials. Now I have truly gone green. I have solar electricity
lighting a string of LED’s in the new room and powering a mini light in the shower
room. At present I use my generator (which uses petrol, so sorry) to pump the
water up to the cold tank, but later the water will be supplied from collected
rainfall and pumped up by a ‘solar’ pump. There is also a hot water tank linked
indirectly to an external radiator/solar collector (both of which I bought
second hand in the UK). These form the basis of a system that should provide
solar heated water – but so far does not. The Mark II version is currently at
the design stage. The whole thing, with the solar battery, is now hidden behind
a wooden frontage and also includes an area in which a small person could possibly
sleep.
I have recently spent a few weeks as an amateur carpenter
making rough window frames, shutters and doors. The front door is in two parts
and, to please Margaret, I have hammered in false nails which are quite popular
around here - they give it a medieval look.
The kitchen unit, which I have mostly knocked up from wood
used as concrete shuttering during the stonework years, is now tiled and awaiting
curtains – it’s strong and of a traditional design, sort of. I have incorporated
one of those strangely deep sinks which are common here; I think they were previously
used for washing clothes. I’ve fitted it with old brass taps, and similarly for
the little basin in the shower room. I bought the latter at our village’s
antique fair for seven Euros each, then later found that you can buy them new
for not much more.
The entire floor of the casita is now covered with very thin
tiles which crack if you stand on them too heavily, but I have created a nice
pattern in the middle. I have still to
tile, paint and provide a shower in the shower room. There will be no toilet at
first since there is nowhere for the effluent to go, but I am working on that.
Isn’t it great to be green? Self sufficient, ecological, low carbon and all
that. Can I offset this against my carbon count in England is some way d’you
think?
Anyway, the mayor (ex), the landlord of our favourite bar,
the mechanic, the stone transporter, the blacksmith’s son, and fellow huerto
owners and friends will, together with their families, hopefully be joining us
for hamburgers, sausages and a rice salad at the “inauguration” at the end of
the week. Oh, and I must not forget to buy beer and wine. Could I forget the
essentials?
Congratulación! So at last you got your pub but in the form of a Spanish bar, Walters Bodega.
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