Nocturne the First: Shadow Mountain

Winter                                                     Settling Moon

Our first night with all of our belongings here. The mattress! How I longed for it when it wasn’t here.

We went out for dinner tonight, looking for something fun. Driving down Black Mountain Drive, Hwy. 78, toward Brook Forest Inn, we went curving past the eastern boundary of the Arapaho National Forest, always down hill from our spot near the summit of Shadow Mountain. The Brook Forest Inn has peculiar hours and was dark when we finally got there.

78 connects with 73 just outside of Evergreen so we kept going, turned left on 73 and went into this little mountain town, a tourist spot at various seasons though it was fairly empty tonight.

Not knowing the restaurants we found the Little Bear, a biker cum blues cum country bar. The tables have initials carved in deep. The walls have dollar bills with quaint sayings, names and dates. My favorite, though somewhat familiar: In Defense of Alcohol I’ve done some pretty stupid things sober, too.

The waitress, whose t-shirt read ‘Did I Have Fun Last Night’, asked us if we were there for the special. Ummm. No. Bison tenderloin kebabs with mashed potatoes, salad and thick doughy bread. It was delicious. Enough for 2 with boxes to take home.

This place has had John Lee Hooker, the Greg Allman Band, Johnny Winters and many others. A good find and a good place to celebrate our new home.

It has, according to its propaganda “…the reputation of being Colorado’s rowdiest mountain bar. Skiers and tourists mingle with colorful locals during their respective seasons in what the Denver Post has described as “popular pandemonium.””

 

Go, Now, The Move Has Ended

Winter                                                          Settling Moon

At 3:30 pm the last mover left Black Mountain Drive: Smitty, DC, Anthony, David and Richard. All gone. With this post I’m retiring the Move category in Ancientrails. Things will crop up related to Minnesota, or problems related to the moving process, certainly to the sale of our home in Andover, but from now on they occur to us as permanent residents of Colorado. No longer moving.

A less dramatic, but more satisfying, period began this afternoon, settling in. Now we cut the masking tape, flatten the cardboard and place things where, for now, they make the most sense to us.

Once our living area, more compact and happily so, has its features defined, then we can move to our separate spaces and begin on them.

So for now, thanks to all who’ve helped us, movers and friends, family and utility workers, Mike the Fence Guy, realtors, too. If you care to call, we are at home in Colorado.

Trolley?

Winter                                                      Settling Moon

Mike the Fence guy came by and got his final check. He said he has a trolley today. Trolley? His neighbor has two Belgian horses and they do trolley rides for various groups, decorating the trolley for the event. He’s a general purpose guy, “I do a lot of things.” We’ll use him to haul away all the cardboard from unpacking, for example.

His resemblance to John Goodman, in habitus, mannerisms and voice is uncanny. He could be a movie double for him easily.

Talking to him today made feel good again about using him for the fence. He knows folks who do all sorts of things, “I’ve lived here 23 years and I know a lot of people.” Local connections are important living in a rural area and we’ve made at least one good one already.

Kate met a woman at the bank who moved here from England a couple of years ago. She said her mother, instead of moving here to be near the grandkids, “moved to Spain.”

 

The Move. Continuing.

Winter                                                  Settling Moon

The lodgepole pines sway in an early morning gust. They have whitened branches near their crowns, remnants of last night’s snow. Today will be clear and colder, Conifer being 16 while Andover registers 37.  A bit backward from expectations, but individual days will vary.

Once all of our stuff finally has a place in our home we can begin the process of shuffling and repositioning. That will take into the summer I imagine, gradually lessening as winter winds down and we make the turn toward our first mountain spring, but continuing as we refine our use of the spaces here.

It’s easier to breathe here, unless exerting yourself, the thinner, cleaner air a mild revelation, the lack of humidity a part of it, too.

We still have to get a washer/dryer, but have to decided to wait until post-Christmas sales.

The longest move, following the longest night, should come to an end today. May it be so.

By Hand

Winter                                                            Settling Moon

A move is a window, very much like cruising, into another world. While traveling the Panama Canal and ports in South American, Kate and I witnessed over and over again the transition in shipping from stevedores manhandling cargo, to the intermodal form of transport using sealed metal containers. These shipping containers are a ubiquitous symbol of globalization and appeared, along with the elaborate derricks and loader/unloaders necessary for their efficient use, in every port we visited.

A domestic move, from home to home, on the other hand, remains in the same historical moment before Macolm P. McLean, a shipping entrepreneur, introduced the container. In these moves each piece of cargo leaves its spot thanks to the hands of men and women (I have to assume there are women movers though I’ve not seen them.).

The cargo goes on a truck, comes off a truck moved by human hands, perhaps with the help of a wheeled dolly. This whole process is, as a result, expensive and time consuming. It’s also subject to breakdowns physical, mechanical and personal. We had all three yesterday.

Today everyone will be fresher. There will be no snow and I imagine care will be taken to avoid the ditch. Today, too, is arrival day.

Fraught

Winter                                                                        Settling Moon

The three movers, David and Anthony, two Apache’s and their nephew, an Apache/Navajo teenager, went on strike last night as dark fell, the tow truck had not come and they had already been working since 8 a.m.

It was a fraught situation. Richard has a plane to catch today, returning to Florida for Christmas with his wife and daughter, two dogs. He needs (in trucker driver needs) unload his truck and he wanted it done last night. Matters, however, conspired against him.

Snow, recalcitrant crew, a truck in a ditch with county snowplows making regular sweeps on Black Mountain Drive, commuters coming home from work and the holiday always lying in the background. He called for the tow at 3:30 p.m. 5:30 pm came and went. Later, Richard learned, the first tow truck had broken its transmission en route.

At 7:05 pm last night, the tow truck finally came. But locals here had seen the situation, talked with Richard, got their pick-ups ready and had him out about 20 minutes before the tow arrived.

All the while I’m relearning the serenity of accepting the things I cannot change.

We start again this morning at 8 am with two crews of two plus Richard. Our belongings will be in the house and up in the loft today. One day more or less is insignificant.

While looking through our front door at the 26 foot U-haul truck stuck in the ditch, its hazard lights lit up the slow fall of snow flakes. “Winter wonderland,” said Richard, the Floridian, with a hint of sarcasm. But, you know, it was. I leaned over to Kate and said, “Won’t this make a great story to tell our grandchildren?”