St. Croix Construction – This week’s progress

What a pleasant surprise  to see progress this week.  I wasn’t sure what to expect with the week being book-ended by holidays.  After the pour on Monday work began on the forms for the cistern walls.  Digging of the “main” 30K gallon cistern began as well. On Wednesday the cistern wall forms were completed and the main cistern excavation continued. Today the smaller 15K gallon cistern walls were poured (12 yards).

Materials update:
6 tons of re-bar were purchased from San Juan 2 weeks ago.
Prepaid 200 yards (of the estimated 550) of concrete last week.

The First Pour

We had our first delivery of concrete today.  13 total yards in two trucks.

12-27-2010 - Cistern

12-27-2010 - Cistern

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

12-27-2010 - Cistern Pour

Let’s Dig Some Holes – Cistern #1

Today was a good day.  Even though we spent the past three weeks moving dirt, clearing brush, and “mobilizing”, today is the first day we did some real digging.  Progress. I like it.  Then plan is to get the smaller 15,000 gallon cistern poured this week.  Probably not the most ambitious of plans, but I will take it.  After waiting so long to get to this point I am ready for some concrete.

December 20, 2010 - Cistern

December 20, 2010 - Cistern

December 20, 2010 - Cistern

December 20, 2010 - Cistern (Roseway in background)

Pre-build Update

A quick update. We have spent the past year and a half working with an architect, getting permits, getting copies of drawings made, getting a mortgage, getting more copies of drawings made, hiring a contractor, and yes, getting even more copies of drawings made. This process took about a year longer than we anticipated. Whenever anybody tells you that things take longer here on St. Croix, believe them. It just does. There is never any rush, and if there is, it is only you doing the rushing.

The four month architecture drawings took eight, not including some modifications. The one month mortgage approval with Scotia Bank took six months. The permits actually were ready in a reasonable two months or so, both DPNR and CZM. Choosing a builder took a few months. Working with the chosen builder to make modifications to get our costs down took another three months. Of course much of this overlapped, but we were at a stand-still for a few months waiting on the mortgage. When we were finally ready to close, the builder wasn’t quite ready, and then we had the wettest October in history. We closed on our mortgage in early November. Nothing much happened in November except that we were now paying excessive building insurance premiums on a vacant lot.

Shortly after closing my builder told me I should look into mowing the lot. My first thought was “aren’t you just going to bulldoze everything?” I purchased a weed-eater and went to work. I worked for four hours and got about 5% of the lot trimmed. So that little project was a failure, but hey, I got a nice new piece of equipment which I will use approximately two more times.

At the beginning of December our builder started to clear the lot with real machinery. Finally, some tangible progress.  Why did I buy that weed-eater?

December 2, 2010

December 4, 2010

December 11, 2010

December 17, 2010

St. Croix – the 2 year update!

Ok – we moved here almost 2 years ago, and I have yet to post a single thing! Seriously, just getting here and everything that led up to that was so stressful that once we made it, I just wanted to enjoy it.

I looked back at some of my old posts (yes, from 3 years ago) and it’s so funny how my perspective of this island has changed after living here. Chad and I are so much more integrated into the community than we ever were in Dallas. It’s like a small town, and believe me, after growing up in a town with 1500 people, I know small towns. Sure, we have 50,000 people living on St. Croix, but you almost cannot go anywhere on this island without seeing someone you know – which I guess has benefits and drawbacks. You may not want to run into your loan officer after you just crawled out of bed and ran to the store to pick up milk, but on the other hand, if you really need help with something, chances are, you will know someone who can help you. Like when Chad broke his nose in a soccer game on a Sunday afternoon, we were on the phone with not one, but two plastic surgeons within thirty minutes. I wouldn’t have even begun to know how to contact one in Dallas.

Being involved in a small community has its other benefits. Reading my post “Running in the Virgin Islands,” I lamented the fact that there would not be any running programs here. Instead, I found a close-knit group to run and train with for the Chicago marathon last year, and I did better in that marathon than I did running with a large group in Dallas.

We’ve also become more involved here by giving of our time. I posted on “St. Croix Animal Rescue” and now I am on the Board for the shelter and Chad helped build their awesome new website. We even adopted the newest member of our family there because we fell in love with Gooch (and let’s be honest, he fell in love with us) the very first time that we volunteered at the shelter.

What else have we done? I am teaching yoga two days a week at Beeston Hill Fitness Center. (thanks for my incredible training, DYC!) Chad is playing soccer with Skills. (Soccer down here is not all like Dallas, or maybe I should say going to watch soccer here is not at all like Dallas.) I wish we could say that we spend every waking moment at the beach, but sadly, that is not the case.

I guess my point is that we have really invested a lot of time and energy into making St. Croix our home and it feels more like home to me than living in Dallas for 12 years ever did. Now if we could just actually build that home. More on that later . . .