Narrowing down the possibilities

Leah and I have found four potential building sites in this general area. Two are on Lavender Mountain within an easy walk of our current house, one is about a mile and a half away at the bottom of Lavender Mountain in Little Texas Valley, and the fourth is about five miles away in Big Texas Valley. Each of these sites has advantages and disadvantages. We have managed to winnow the choices down.

The first we rejected is the land on Big Texas Valley Road. It looks buildable, but the road it faces is not pedestrian friendly. Is it ridiculous to reject a potential home site because I can’t walk dogs on the road it faces? That’s what we did.

The second we rejected is the land at the bottom of the hill. Its biggest problem is that it slopes gently from each end to the middle, where there is a drainage ditch. We would want the house roughly centered on the lot, but that wouldn’t be possible here. It’s also generally kind of ugly land and it would have no view at all.

That leaves two possibilities. The one we prefer is the closest. It’s roughly square, it has some nice, mature trees, and it might have a view, depending on how high the house site would be compared to some tall trees across the road from the lot. The biggest drawback for this one is that it’s too expensive. We have set a limit on what to spend for the lot, and this one exceeds it by a good margin. We asked the real estate agent, who lives up the street from us and who handled the sale of my mother’s house, to ask the owners if they would consider an offer. We haven’t heard back yet, but we don’t expect good news.

The other issue is that this land slopes enough that a house would have to have a basement. That’s OK with me, but Leah prefers no basement, and, of course, a basement adds to the cost.

That leaves the other lot on the mountain. This one is a close second. It has a good building site and, again, potentially a view if enough trees are cut. This site is actually three lots offered separately or as a group. Any one of them is well within out budget, but the three of them together are slightly over, although that might be negotiable. The building site here is on a rounded hillock that slopes gently away in all directions.

The biggest problem with this site is that my cell signal goes from LTE (Verizon’s 4G), to 3G, to 1X as you approach the site along Fouche Gap Road. That might be a big “so what?” for making voice calls, but we have to use Verizon’s cellular service for our internet access, and 1X is essentially unusable for data. That would mean switching to satellite internet service, because there is no other way to access the internet up on the mountain.

Both of the rejected lots have access to DSL (Verizon’s LTE service is about as fast as the fastest DSL service that AT&T offers, as far as I can tell). Here’s why DSL isn’t available on top of the mountain.

our phone lines

That “Bell cable” lying in the ditch is our telephone line. It’s mostly buried but is right out on the open in other places. The cable was marked to make sure a county crew didn’t cut it when they did their annual weed mowing.

Cable television is, of course, out of the question.

DSL is fairly slow, but as far as I can tell, the data limits for most DSL plans is about 30 times higher than our cell data limit or a reasonably-priced satellite plan (150 G vs 5 G for our current plan).

So right now we are waiting to hear back from the real estate agent, and expect the news to be negative. If it is, we’ll make an offer on the second choice, and I’m pretty sure we can manage one or possibly two of those lots.

Assuming we end up buying a lot, we’ll probably use what’s left from our land budget, if there is any, plus whatever we end up getting after the sale of my mother’s house to start construction. We should be able to get a good bit done. I think we could get the site preparation done, a well drilled, and a septic system installed. Depending on how much we have, I hope we could get at least the foundation completed. At that point, we will need to sell our house. Our current plan is to live in our travel trailer on the building site until the house is done. That might end up being kind of stressful unless I can really expedite the process.

In the meantime, I am doing all the work on the house that convinced me we needed to move in the first place. Once I’m finished with the outside I’ll have to complete the basement by installing floors, bathroom fixtures, doors and trim. I don’t look forward to it, but I’ve done most of that before.

And now for something else. When we took the dogs for a late walk Wednesday night, a state patrol car drove past us up Lavender Trail, and then down Wildlife Trail. When it came back by us, it stopped and the trooper talked to us for a while. It turns out that he recently moved up to Rome from the Atlanta area and was looking for some land for sale on Lavender Mountain. He specifically asked us about the land that is our second and mostly likely choice. We learned that his wife has cancer, and they have a daughter. And we learned that he makes about $35,000 a year. That’s the standard for a state trooper after finishing trooper school. Leah and I both felt sorry for him, and I personally feel a little ashamed that the state of Georgia can’t do better by its employees.

I might have to burn the place

I thought I had found and eliminated the wasp nest responsible for the stings I got last week, but when I was working on the deck Saturday afternoon, I got stung again. This time the wasp got me four times before I killed it. I swatted at the wasp as it stung me on the chest, and then it stung my arm. The sting on my chest was not bad, but it got me twice on the inside of my arm just above my wrist, and a third time on my elbow. Within a short time my arm was red and swollen from my hand to my elbow. I looked like Popeye.

I used two cold packs in the evening. They helped while they were on my arm, but didn’t provide any relief after I removed them. If I had taken a dose of diphenhydramine immediately it might have helped, but we didn’t have any and I can’t take diphenhydramine anyway.

I put some cortisone cream on the stings when we went to bed, but my arm continued to itch so intensely that I couldn’t sleep. The only thing that gave me any relief was running extremely hot water over most of my forearm. I had to do it twice during the night. Otherwise I might have scratched my arm raw.

On Sunday my arm still felt kind of like an overinflated balloon. Now, as I write this Sunday evening the swelling seems to be going down, and a topical diphenhydramine cream seems to help a little. I will probably have to use the hot-water treatment again tonight.

Right before bedtime on Saturday I went out with a can of wasp and hornet spray. (If you need this kind of spray, I recommend Raid, not Hot Shot.). I carefully rechecked the under side of the upper deck and found nothing. Then I went under the lower deck. The lower deck has between three and four feet of clearance on the southeast corner, but only about a foot and a half on the northwest end, decreasing as you go under. I slid under and looked up. There it was, another small nest. I doused it and kept looking. It had rained so the ground was pretty muddy. Of course I had to slide around on my back. I couldn’t find any more active nests, so maybe I have eliminated the problem. I think I’m going to have a hard time making myself go back out there again, though.

 

 

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