8:10 am - Tuesday - February 3rd - TWW - 30° F, humidity 24%, cloud cover 0%, wind 5 mph out of the east.....crystal clear, blue, sunny skies today with a forecast high of 65° F. The view this morning.....
....and on this date in 2013 TLE and I were watching our 38th and final sunset....
....at Cedar Key, FL......time to move on to more adventures! Over the next few weeks we headed out to the Florida Keys, and ultimately, Key West, then up the east coast to Washington D.C.
We slept in until after 7 am Monday morning, but within two hours we were in the VW Beetle heading back north to TWW. The traffic was light on I-17 as we drove north to pickup Arizona route 69, which would take us to 89A, and ultimately Able Saw (Stihl dealer in Prescott) where I wanted to drop off our 16" Stihl chainsaw to have a new pull rope installed as the original one snapped the other day when we were cutting up the pinyon pine. Since we were going there anyway I brought three chains to be sharpened. From there we headed over to Fry's (Kroger) to do a BIG shopping, which took about an hour. By the time we were back in the Beetle it was after 11:30 am, meaning we would be arriving at TWW around 1:30 pm.....in fact we arrived around 1:20 pm without incident.
Everything was as we left it, and our Bluetti battery bank, without the aid of the Predator 5000, was back to 86%. Within 90 minutes it was back 100%. The house batteries had been at 100% for a few hours. This caused me to rethink our use of the Predator every morning for 1-2 hours (depends on cloud cover). After thinking about that for a while I told TLE we would be running an experiment Tuesday by not running the Predator 5000 at all, so we could see how long it took the Bluetti batteries to recharge. The only thing different between being gone for two days and being home is the early morning usage of the electric hot water kettle for our coffee, and running my laptop and external hard drives for an hour, or so. It may take longer each day to get the Bluetti battery bank back to 100% without the Predator, but if we can then that would reduce our usage of propane significantly, which is our only major expense outside of groceries (propane costs us about $225/month in the winter). Added to that is the sun is getting higher in the sky with each passing day, and the EcoWorthy dual axis solar tracker is tilting earlier and earlier, and stowing later and later each day, so we are getting more charging time each clear day. Naturally, when there is significant cloud cover we get less maximum charging time. I will report back to you tomorrow with the results. Right now as I write the Bluetti battery bank is at 52%, and the solar tracker tilted about 30 minutes ago (8:03 am).
Charles and Phyllis will be arriving for a three day stay Tuesday, midday, and we will begin installing the rain gutters on the house to capture rain fall into 3 new IBC water totes, thus doubling our water catchment ability. We will also, in the near future, begin refurbishing the chicken coop which came with the property, plus resealing the barn roof, which leaks when it rains, or snows, and finally moving the eight 400 watt solar panels which are now on the ground up to the barn roof. Additionally we will be moving, in the very near future, Phyllis' Newell to its new site next to ours. However, the first thing I need to do is reinstall the fuel shutoff valve, and fuel line on the tractor so we can get it moved out of the driveway before Charles and Phyllis arrive around noon time.
Thanks for stopping by!


















































