It has been said that home is where the heart is and home is where you hang your hat.
Depending on whether I am in Yucatan or Texas “home” can change under either scenario. I have to confess that home is actually where my wife is.
It seems that no matter where I go, I’m always thinking of her and how she would like, react, or object to where I am or what I’m doing.
For example, when I am in Yucatan, she always says, “Go do some tourist stuff. See the ruins, find a nice restaurant, go to the beach.” Honestly, I’ve tried to do all of those things but if she isn’t with me, it’s just not a lot of fun.
However, what I do enjoy for a while is when I go to our house in Cansahcab, Yucatan, getting up early and having a quiet time before the day starts when everything is really peaceful.
When we first began our work on the house it looked liked this.
As best we can tell, the house is between 200 and 300 years old. It had a corrugated sheet metal roof and open rafters inside. It was just one large room with hamaqueros embedded in the wall to hang hammocks from for sleeping. This is the way it was done and during the past 100 years, dozens of parents, children, cousins and aunts and uncles were born here, slept here and died here.
A walk around the backyard, or patio as it’s called in Yucatan, revealed a number of fruit trees. I immediately fell in love with the yard as I’ve always had land envy and this looked like my chance.
It had been on the market for a few years, locally but no one was interested so when my wife’s father mentioned selling it again, I begged him not to and to leave it Josefina. On their next trip down there together, he did exactly that. So that’s how we got this house.
Today, the house has changed significantly, but not without some pain along the way. Dishonest contractors, incompetent contractors and just the basic learning experience along the way has been a real education.
Today, our home away from home looks like this.