One mission accomplished, just in time

With the forecast predicting the weather to break (and rain to start) at five o’clock this afternoon I had decided that today was the day that I would finish clearing the horno/bodega. I still had about a ton of rubble, vines and other debris to shift, but it would be much easier to do so while it was dry and not saturated.

This is how the horno looked when I broke into in earlier in the month and got my first look, deciding then that I would use some of my time at the house to try and clear the tons of collapsed roof and other junk.

As I found it....

And I’ve spent quite a bit of time in there before finally shovelling out my last barrow full of debris at around two-thirty this afternoon. This is how it looks now, and I’m feeling pretty proud of myself despite a sore back, and a slightly twisted right knee.

...as I'm leaving it.

So what was the final total of rubbish, the interesting stuff rather than the rubble, slate and soil?

  • Two bicycles and assorted mudguards and seats
  • A waist high pile of clothes, rags, and shoes
  • A gas stove (small)
  • Over eighty intact bottles, most of which used to contain alcohol
  • A car seat
  • Enough seed trays to start a nursery
  • Assorted motorbike paraphernalia including, helmet, mirrors, oil filter, carburettor, mudguards, and shiny reflecting things
  • The remnants of several sacks of salt and lime (nice easy shovelling)
  • At least one steel plough and one steel bedstead
  • Loads of old tins (mostly tuna or oil)

….and the rear half of a large plastic pink woolly sheep for which I never did find the front end!

At four o’clock the rain came just as predicted, and I felt just a little bit smug.

 

Posted in Barn Renovation | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Living local life

Within the space of twelve hours I’ve had two big dollops of local Galician life, and thoroughly enjoyed both as a nice break from working on the house.

On the way home last night I bumped into my new friend, car mechanic/building guru, Neil and had a couple of beers in a local hostelry. As we departed he invited me to join him and his wife Rosa at a barbecue to be held in Pontenova. After explaining the potentially restrictive nature my vegetarianism at such an event, I agreed.

It was a small gathering (25 to 30 people who all knew each other and were probably related) in a quaint little community centre about 2km outside Pontenova. It was a special festival which was being held in celebration of the humble chestnut. The alcohol was flowing from the minute we entered, and chestnut soup was followed by chorizo and ribs (a plate of cheese brought for me, the awkward one) and then a local bread and butter pudding desert, and as many roast chestnuts as you could eat. All this was washed down by as much local wine as you wanted, coffee, and then liqueurs (I went for the safe option of Brandy).

Good conversation, in a mixture of English and Spanish, was followed by an old miner from Pontenova playing half a dozen tunes on his Galician gaita, although I could barely discern the differences between each one except perhaps slightly longer pauses between some of the notes.

We made out excuses just before 2am and departed, although I think that the real party had barely begun, the chestnut was to be celebrated long into the night.

My plan was to rise early and hit the market in Meira which I had been told was worth a trip, if only for the freshly cooked octopus (pulpo). I woke late, decided on a bit more of a lie in, and set off for Meira (25km away) around 10am.

The market was much as I expected. Most of the stalls were selling socks, clothes (mostly from the 1970’s and 80’s), shoes and cheap watches but there were also quite a few selling knives and axes (most of which it would be illegal to own in the UK), fruit and vegetables, cheese and ham, bread and pastries and the local wine/firewater in unlabelled bottles for a few euros.

Mostly dull socks, shoes and outdated clothes

There were very few people at most of the stalls, and the majority of the menfolk (about three quarters of those in attendance were men) were either at one of the bars, huddled round one stall selling hardware (ferretería) trying to find a bargain, or around the live animals section where you could buy chickens, rabbits or ducks (including a box full of the cutest little yellow ducklings imaginable).

Some interesting food stalls

Eggs anyone?

I had a  good wander round, perhaps three or four times, and when I saw that people had started patronising the impromptu pulpo restaurants I decided that it was time for me to indulge in the ‘breakfast of kings’.

Octopus being cooked in copper pots

Seven euros got me a wooden plate piled high with pimenton and olive oil covered octopus, boiled in massive copper pots, a good chunk of bread and a bottle of local wine (shame I was driving and could only drink one glass full). I seemed to start a trend and soon the place was heaving, everyone tucking into their pulpo, chattering away and all thoroughly enjoying it.

The breakfast of kings

The pulpo was so good (or the wine so alcoholic) that on the way back to the Land Rover I celebrated my breakfast by buying two kilos of cheap apples…all for Enrique!

 

Posted in Food & Drink, Local Life | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Spot the difference

It’s what I think journalists refer to as ‘a slow news day’. I got up late, bought a few provisions and then had a good old fry-up for brunch, along with a big cup of coffee containing ‘slightly off’ UHT milk.

I am off to the house later to show Dolores the work completed so far, as she last saw the house a couple of days after I arrived. I hope that she’ll be pleasantly shocked.

This got me thinking about how much has been achieved in just five weeks, crushing the myth of lazy Spanish builders in Galicia at least. So rather than a long rambling blog about nothing, here are a couple of ‘before and after’ comparisons (click on the pictures for a bigger version).

Cabazo: Before and after

Barn: Before and after

Posted in Barn Renovation | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Fire, fire!

I’ve not got a particularly good track record with angle grinders. I bought one a few years ago when we were fitting steel spindles to the new staircase at our house in Huddersfield, with near disastrous consequences.

A family friend of Amanda, a very good carpenter, was doing all the clever stuff and I was assisting by fetching and carrying and making complementary noises. Then came time to cut the spindles and rather than the carpenter take control he showed me how to make the first cut and then told me to get on with it.

Me and power tools have never really got on. Three or four spindles in I got some unexpected ‘kick-back’ dropped the still spinning angle grinder which hit the floor and bent the aluminium guard onto the spinning disk. This tore a section free and sent it hurtling in the general direction of my head. I turned to one side and a sharp pointed piece of shrapnel pierced my left ear and embedded itself in the back of my skull.

I quickly pulled it free, went into the house with blood running through my fingers and trickling down the inside of my shirt, and sought the emergency assistance of the family friend carpenter. He took one look and said, in a good Yorkshire accent, ‘It’s nowt’. Despite my injury I went back to cutting the spindles, but now with a much safer hacksaw.

When Amanda came home I recounted the story and then asked her to clean the wound. She listened intently to one of my usual hypochondriac tales but on seeing the wound promptly passed out!

It was then with some trepidation that I decided to christen my new angle grinder which I purchased on Monday from AKI in Lugo, and tackle the steel tubed milking stalls.

Now no more

This time I was correctly attired for one of the most fearsome bits of DIY kit; non-slip boots, hard-hat with visor, thick gloves, and my increasingly filthy overalls. I had even read the manual. My new ‘toy’ made short work of the substantial steels and after a few cuts I was quite enjoying myself with sparks flying everywhere and metal being cut like a knife through butter.

Enjoying myself until I realised that I had set myself on fire. I patted the fire out to find that my jumper had melted onto the t-shirt underneath. I quickly disrobed. ‘Made from Recycled Plastic Bottles’ read the label, a Christmas present a few years ago from Mother…thanks Mum.

I’ll put my wardrobe malfunction down to tiredness.

Last night there was a massive domestic argument in the house next door. It was the kind of argument that you’d expect to end in a blood curdling scream as one of the protagonists sinks a knife into the other.  At about 1am I was awoken from a deep sleep and with the noise thought someone was inside Casa Ramon. My bedroom is three rooms removed from the party wall, but I could hear them as plain as day as they yelled at one another and seemingly reorganised all the furniture in every room in the house.

It went on for about half an hour and then stopped suddenly. At 5pm the following day all the flat shutters are still down, perhaps they both had a knife and lunged at the same time? I just wish I understood more Spanish, I’m sure it would have been a great listen.

Posted in Barn Renovation, Local Life | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

One very proud roofer

I now feel that normality has returned after the weekends hectic whistle stop tour of Galicia. Rather than hire cars, make hotel reservations, decide where to eat, and worry about what would everyone think, my concerns are now far more mundane and include;

  • Why do Spanish ‘MIX’ crisps which supposedly contain ‘Wotsits’, ‘Doritos’ and ‘3D’ always contain a disproportionately larger amount of ‘Wotsits’?
  • Will my conscience allow me an extra ten minutes in bed listening to Chris Evans over wifi on my mobile phone?
  • How do I get ‘Enrique’ to take an apple from my hand again (following last weeks accidental electrocution) instead of having to put it on the ground in front of him and then retreat ten paces before he takes any interest?

As you can see life is very simple here (and would be even simpler without supermarkets where you can by ‘MIX’ crisps) and I absolutely love it, I just wish Amanda was here too, rather than her enjoying Galicia by proxy.

Today I’ve got one very happy builder, Angel, who today completed the roof of the cabazo. He was so pleased that he dragged me away from my digging in the horno/bodega to take a photograph of him on the summit of the grain store, ‘pleased as punch’ at his work. He’s every right to be proud, it looks superb, especially in today’s brilliant sunshine.

One very happy builder

He spent the rest of the day shouting to anyone who walked past (which amounted to three people all afternoon), ‘Nice cabazo, eh?’.

Just for good measure here is another photograph of the completed cabazo roof, with its quartz end stones, restored to its former glory and ready to keep the weather at bay for the next two hundred years. This one without Angel.

Magnificent

There is, however, still a little work to do inside. Yesterday I helped Alejandro (helped in the loosest sense of the word as I spent more time balanced precariously and trying to avoid falling 40 feet through the beams, rather than actually assisting with anything) move two of the remaining three beams after a rotten one was removed.

The view up from ground level (there will be floorboards later)

Today I have been mostly…in the horno/bodega. This was partially to take shade from the sun and avoid sun burn, but also because I’ve done very little in there over the last couple of days due to the rain.

In today’s excavations I found;

  • A three burner ceramic gas hob
  • A ten foot long television aerial
  • A long electrical flex, which I was convinced would have another washing machine on the end, but which eventually came free and wasn’t attached to anything
  • A laurel tree, still growing, and now baffling me as to how I am going to remove it
  • The rear half of a large pink plastic sheep (the mind simply boggles!)

Tomorrow, my sole aim is to try and find the front half of the pink sheep, but I am rapidly running out of rubbish.

 

Posted in Barn Renovation | Tagged , , , , , , , | 3 Comments