I said a few weeks ago that we were only waiting for the cistern plans but I forgot to mention the other remaining documents prior to permitting. Our site plan should be completed soon and we're waiting on the documents to show we're current on our federal income tax and our property tax. We couldn't do the site plan until we had the cistern design to show how the cistern and dome sit on the property with elevation drawings, septic, drain field, driveway and other items.
I pulled out the rock tumbler from the container last week and Denise has been working with her rocks she found on the island, and also ones we found when we were hiking with Cody and Kenzie in San Antonio back in February.
Denise had a few rocks that needed to be cut down or shaped before they went into the tumbler so I pulled out the Dremel and the tile saw from the container.
She found a lot of interesting rocks with great patterns inside that will be turned into jewelry and other items. She also started cutting some older shells found near the property and discovered great designs inside. Denise's craft room will be a busy place when it's complete.
We collected about 16 magpie shells for the hermit crabs, and a few for craft work, although those shells are typically not that interesting once the white areas wear off. Denise took a red permanent marker and numbered the 15 remaining shells from smallest to largest. We placed them in the hermit crab feeding area and this morning only number 14 remained. During our morning walk with the dogs we found number 13 about 200' down our road. I'll put some canned cat food out in the feeding area later this afternoon and see how many numbered shells return for food.
Hmmm, what will the weather be like this week? Oh yeah, wonderful! This screen shot was from last week but this week is pretty much the same. You can see the couple days were it shows some rain. The greatest difference from Washington state weather that we love is the rain comes down, sometimes hard for about 10 minutes then it's gone and sunny again.
With all the daily sun we plan on using solar for our new house. Our neighbor Gerry has a roof replacement coming due to some hurricane damage and was interested in the adhesive solar panels attached to his new metal standing seam roof. We had a call with the manufacturer a few days ago to discuss the benefits of their design. This may be an option for us if I build stand-off panels on the vertical edge of our cistern/deck. This new design of panel does not require direct angles to the sun and with the wrap around deck we should receive power all day. More to come.
I was given a solar panel from our neighbor Don and I purchased a small solar controller, pump and landscape irrigation tubing to trial a solar hot water heater for the tub that will be in Denise's oasis. This is a hidden area on the property with a soaking tub. The picture below shows my basic setup for the trial. The solar panel charges the battery and runs the pump. I also have the water going through a solar pad (laying over the pool) I found in the bush. I have no idea what house it came off of but it is still in great shape and doesn't leak. Joys of hurricane debris distribution. The trial was very successful and I have some great ideas for the layout of the oasis.
That's all for now.
Kevin & Denise
Monday, August 20, 2018
Saturday, August 4, 2018
Island Critters
Denise and I have seen a wide variety of critters on the island from cool looking bugs, to small and large lizards and iguana's. When I remember, or have my phone with me, I take a picture of the animals and thought I'd share a few since I've been asked by friends what we have here. Sadly most of the iguana's we've seen have been dead on the road, and I'm not stopping for a photo op. You can click on a picture and scroll through and enlarge them.
There are three different types of frogs and toads we've seen. These guys are pretty cool and our cat Jack hopefully has learned not to mess with them. We hear they have a coating on their skin that can make a predators day turn bad really quickly. Jack found one in our room and after I put it outside he spent the next hour licking his lips trying to get it off. Fortunately he didn't have any additional issues.
This toad is huge, around the size of a soft ball! The dogs don't mess with him and he pretty much owns the property.
This is a large Caterpillar that I believe is a Pseudosphinx tetrio. It lives on the frangipani tree. The caterpillars typically eat all of the leaves on the tree, but we're told this is a good symbiotic relationship. The leaves of the frangipani typically fall off in the cooler weather and since we don't have cooler weather, the caterpillars do the job. They will completely clean off a tree in a few weeks, but wait a bit and the leaves come back. I've searched on the surrounding trees for the pupa and would love to see the moth when it emerges.
We have some tiny scorpions on the island that are not dangerous. What I learned from working at the arthropod exhibit at the Oregon zoo years ago is the claws tell the story. If the claws are large then the scorpion uses them to rip apart their prey, and only have the sting of a bee or less. If the claws are long and slender then they use their stinger to subdue their prey and can hurt or kill a human.
We have really cool millipedes here. There's the larger black African type as in the picture below that can have a body diameter close to a dime. We also the smaller black and yellow type that roam the streets and try to get into the house.
La Cucaracha! Yep, We've got em. So far we've seen them mainly outside in the rain forest but occasionally you'll find one in the house. This one is about 1.5" long.
We have the typical wasps here. I have a coconut palm in a bucket of water getting ready to plant and the wasps have been coming by to get a drink. I've been knocking them down and the black ants have been attacking and killing them. You may need to zoom in to the picture below to see the ants devouring the wasps.
Here's a few of the really cool spiders we have. The first picture is a spider in the middle of a 6 foot web. I was walking our property and almost walked into it. The third picture has an amazing abdomen. My Audubon society arthropod book is still in the container so I can't look up the names. Leave a comment if you know the names of anything I can't identify.
Pretty cool blue bee.
This is a long post so thanks for sticking around.
Denise and I went driving around Salt River bay yesterday to the kayak tour locations to see if they had any used ones for sale. We ran across some people at the Christopher Columbus landing site as they were setting a dumpster. We stopped and asked if they were in need of any volunteers. They were so we spent four hours today with a group of people cleaning up the beach. We had a great time and had about 75% fill on the dumpster. The hurricanes deposited most of the large debris but there were plenty of beer bottles, cans and water bottles. Our property is the notch on the right side of the hill in the background.
I've been asked how big St Croix is compared to where we move from. I took a screen capture from Google Earth at the same eye altitude and put them together. For those of you who know the Portland/Vancouver area you'll see the size our little island.
That's all for now.
Kevin & Denise
There are three different types of frogs and toads we've seen. These guys are pretty cool and our cat Jack hopefully has learned not to mess with them. We hear they have a coating on their skin that can make a predators day turn bad really quickly. Jack found one in our room and after I put it outside he spent the next hour licking his lips trying to get it off. Fortunately he didn't have any additional issues.
We also have white frogs that hang out above the bathroom shower window. That side of the house gets the rain which they like. We have a louvered window in the shower with a screen inside and we were getting cold so I closed it after removing the frogs. After about 2 weeks our bathroom started stinking really bad. Turns out I missed a frog and he ended up tangled in the linkage. Removing the rotted frog was pretty disgusting.
This toad is huge, around the size of a soft ball! The dogs don't mess with him and he pretty much owns the property.
Sorry for the bad photo. These are tropical house gecko's and commonly known as Wood Slaves. They are from Africa and got their name by hitching rides to the New World aboard Negro slave ships from West Africa (From Wikipedia link). These guys are camera shy but are brave enough to jump on and run up your leg. I was cleaning up the room downstairs and moved a ladder. This guy jumped from the ground to my leg and started crawling up to my shorts. Weirdest feeling ever! I put my hands around my leg and shorts and started shaking my leg until he jumped off. They're harmless but it was a pretty funny sight as I'm trying to get him off of me.
We have the standard gecko's too. They are really good to have in the house since they eat many bad bugs. I read a local forum the other day about them and a person new to the island was asking how to get rid of them. The responses were telling the guy to leave them and that you'd have far more unwanted guests without them. My favorite response in the forum was, "I have many gecko's in my house that keep the mosquito volume down. One even saved me 15% on my auto insurance." We have one in each corner of the living room and many outside.
Termites! Yes we have them which is another reason why wood is not a good exterior building material. The first picture below shows the tubes they create along a walkway or on trees. When you break them open you'll find a termite highway going in both directions. I clear one of these off the path during my morning walk and it will be rebuilt in a day or two.
The second picture is a termite nest in a tree. These are about the size of a large beach ball and very hard. The hurricane knocked many down and broke them apart but I forgot to take pictures of the insides. Basically they have many curved paths inside that don't appear to have a structure like an ant mound, but I may be wrong. The tree itself is locally called a tourist tree because it's thin bark is red and peels like a sun burnt tourist.
We have some tiny scorpions on the island that are not dangerous. What I learned from working at the arthropod exhibit at the Oregon zoo years ago is the claws tell the story. If the claws are large then the scorpion uses them to rip apart their prey, and only have the sting of a bee or less. If the claws are long and slender then they use their stinger to subdue their prey and can hurt or kill a human.
We have really cool millipedes here. There's the larger black African type as in the picture below that can have a body diameter close to a dime. We also the smaller black and yellow type that roam the streets and try to get into the house.
La Cucaracha! Yep, We've got em. So far we've seen them mainly outside in the rain forest but occasionally you'll find one in the house. This one is about 1.5" long.
We have the typical wasps here. I have a coconut palm in a bucket of water getting ready to plant and the wasps have been coming by to get a drink. I've been knocking them down and the black ants have been attacking and killing them. You may need to zoom in to the picture below to see the ants devouring the wasps.
Here's a few of the really cool spiders we have. The first picture is a spider in the middle of a 6 foot web. I was walking our property and almost walked into it. The third picture has an amazing abdomen. My Audubon society arthropod book is still in the container so I can't look up the names. Leave a comment if you know the names of anything I can't identify.
The rest of the bugs are various things I've seen.
Pretty cool blue bee.
We also have deer that steal fruits and vegetables from gardens. We saw some huge bulls on Mahogany drive.
Homo sapians. We're told that after the hurricanes last year the human population is down to 35,000 from the 50,000 on St Croix. Denise and I added two to the count and are not leaving. Below is our friend and neighbor Gerry enjoying lunch with us at Off the Wall during Sahmie's visit. We had a good time while she was here and now she's back home to the Seattle rain.
Denise and I went driving around Salt River bay yesterday to the kayak tour locations to see if they had any used ones for sale. We ran across some people at the Christopher Columbus landing site as they were setting a dumpster. We stopped and asked if they were in need of any volunteers. They were so we spent four hours today with a group of people cleaning up the beach. We had a great time and had about 75% fill on the dumpster. The hurricanes deposited most of the large debris but there were plenty of beer bottles, cans and water bottles. Our property is the notch on the right side of the hill in the background.
I've been asked how big St Croix is compared to where we move from. I took a screen capture from Google Earth at the same eye altitude and put them together. For those of you who know the Portland/Vancouver area you'll see the size our little island.
That's all for now.
Kevin & Denise
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