7:58 am - Sunday - December 14th - TWW - 36° F, humidity 29%, wind 8 mph out of the east.....partly cloudy today with a forecast high of 65° F. On this date in 2021 we awoke to this amazing scene.....
.....in the Anza Borrego Desert where we were boondocking.
Friday evening when I was walking back to the Newell after checking on our Predator 5000 dual fuel generator I tripped over a rock outcropping about the size of my fist. I've stubbed my toe on this outcropping, and now my inattention caused me to trip over it and fall. Fortunately, other than the damage to my ego, my physical injuries were minor (a bruise on my left palm, and a sore left big toe). This is not the only fist sized rock outcropping around the coach, and in the circular driveway, which we cross often on foot. After treating my injured hand I told TLE that Saturday we were going to attack all of those rock outcroppings, and eliminate them once and for all, and that is what we did for 3 hours Saturday, ending around 1pm when we pried the last outcropping out of its hole.....
......almost all of the outcroppings we dug out were like ice bergs, only in this case the amount of rock showing on the surface was only about 5% of the actual volume. Some of the rocks we removed from the driveway required both TLE and I to move them, even then we could only roll them out of the hole and across the driveway. TLE and I can easily lift an 8d battery (truck type) which is 150 lbs., so many of these rocks must have weighted closer to 200 lbs. In all I think we removed 600-800 pounds of rocks in the 3 hours we worked. The holes left behind are so large we'll have to haul dirt in the Ford tractor loader to fill them. In fact, we'll have to use the tractor to move the rocks we removed to another location.
By the time we finished removing the final rock, which was the largest, and hardest of all of them, it was 1 pm. We only removed about 1/2 of that final rock....what we left in the ground was probably 60% of the total size, but using a large sledge hammer I was able to break the upper part away from the lower part enabling us to remove the part that was sticking out of the ground. It seems that all of these rocks are of the caliche variety, which is usually found 1-2 feet below the surface, but these caliche rocks have obviously worked their way to the surface over the eons since they were formed.
TLE brought cold water, and snacks out to the picnic table in front of the house, and we sat there in the shade cooling down for the better part of an hour from 3 of the hardest work hours we have experienced here at TWW. Without TLE's help, and determination we could not have gotten this job done. Frankly, if I had known in advance how hard it would be I'm not sure I would have committed to removing them. Often it is better not to know, right? Once TLE and I begin a project like this we are like bulldogs trying to get at a bone.
Later in the day TLE and I removed everything from the greenhouse interior that did not pertain to growing stuff. There were two tables, one holding all of the painted firring strips not yet used, and the other the rain gutters Charles and Phyllis bought last week. Over the next 5 days we'll finish the firring strip installation, then install the rain gutters so we can begin catching water. The long range forecast shows possible rain Christmas Eve, and Christmas Day, and we would love to catch that runoff, if possible.
Thanks for stopping by!










































