Issue Four

I bet they knew the storm was coming before we did. 42,000 bees newly tucked into our 4 Warre hives. We’d decided to wait to strap the hives to the stands until we had finished 2 or 3 weeks of feeding the bees and taking off the roof to change the feeders. It takes the bees a little while to glue the hive body boxes together, but we knew that the hives wouldn’t be top-heavy since they would just be starting to build comb. Not super high risk for blowing over. We thought. We hadn’t counted on 50mph wind gusts in those two vulnerable weeks.


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Issue Three

I was starting to get a little lot worried about finding a wood stove in time. Buying used meant we could get great quality within our budget. It also meant we might need to order some parts to get it working perfectly.

And I didn’t know how long that would take.

I told Robert I was checking Craigslist three times a day and trying not to feel anxious. It seemed like all the good ones had come and gone before we were ready to get one…


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Issue One (and a half…)

The surveyor’s office looked like a moving crew and a bunch of toddlers had collided. It wasn’t pretty, and neither was the timeline. 4-5 weeks. Yikes! Even if we were willing to shell out the $700 to have our boundary lines marked, it was going to cost us a month. Every surveyor in the region had stacks of work higher than a forest. Austin’s sprawling like a sunbathing cat, and the lack of rain over the summer meant that the building industry hadn’t taken a siesta.

I texted Robert the news, and he wrote back that he was working on a solution.

Our driveway and utilities were all waiting on one little line…


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