Thursday 31 March 2011

Beware the Ides


14 – 16 March 2011-03-31

There was no avoiding it – if we were going to move out of the apartment, I had to spend some time sorting and packing up.  So we agreed that I would take Monday to Wednesday to do this.  Monday went well, but by Tuesday I’d developed a toothache and had to go into Lefkas.  The dentist said it wasn’t too serious, and let it settle for a week, so I made another appointment and went to pick up a letter waiting for me.

 I’d had a call a week before, saying that a letter that should’ve gone to me at the post office had been misdirected to this courier office in Lefkas and could I come and collect it, please.  We’d been so busy, this was my first chance.  It turned out to be from OTE (the telephone people) and was the quote for the ‘column’ to bring the phone to Goat Bottom.  700 euros.  Not bad, considering the closest estimate we’d had so far was for ‘less than 2,000’.  The letter was, of course, in Greek.  I was just walking down the street, thinking I was pretty sure I could make out what it was saying, when I met a Greek friend, who stopped and chatted, and on impulse I asked him to translate the letter.  It was a relief to know I was right about it – there were no hidden factors, except that OTE reserved the right to charge more if they met unexpected difficulties.  So it goes.

The letter gave me 14 days to respond, and 11 of those had already gone, so I hot footed round to OTE and waved the letter at the desk clerk.  He said, ‘do you want to pay?’  I said, ‘I want to know when it will be done.’  He sent me up the back stairs to find the technical department and ask them.  The man there was on the phone to his bank to sort out his credit card.  He was a bit distracted.  He said he couldn’t find the papers, and I should ring a Mr Kavvadias.  I asked if I could pay the 700 euros by credit card.  He got confused between my credit card and the one he was telephoning about.  I said, ‘no worries’ and went to ask downstairs. 

I eventually found my way out into the shop again – it wasn’t easy.  I went to the pay windows and queued up.  After 10 minutes I got to the window and showed my letter and my credit card.  The clerk, who was a little abrupt, did that Greek upwards nod which means No.  I thought it meant No – but I tried to confirm it was a No - he was more abrupt.  Oxi.  Go away.

I went to the bank.  I had just over 200 euros on me, and could take out another 500.  10 minutes to the cashpoint, 10 minutes back.  Another queue.  Abrupt man wasn’t too pleased to see me.  I gave him the letter, and waved 700 euros at him.  He gave me a look.  Then he shouted for someone else.  The other man was the original desk clerk.  He was very helpful.  We went back to his desk and he issued an invoice.  I tried to give him the money, but he said I had to pay at the pay desk. 

Back at the pay desk, in the queue again.  I decided to avoid Abrupt man, and queue for the other window which had opened up with a younger man.  10 minutes queueing.  At the window I brandished my invoice, and the roll of cash.  Young man looked at the invoice, looked at me, looked at the money, and said, ‘you want to pay seven HUNDRED euros?!!’   ‘Yes, please’ I said wearily.  He called over Abrupt man, who looked at the invoice, looked at me, looked at the money, and said – abruptly - ‘take it’.

Staggering out into the daylight, I felt battered, and went for a sustaining coffee. 

On the way home I bought some little plants – courgette, pepper, aubergine, and some geraniums for colour.  Potentially sacrificial, to test if the goats will eat them.  Then I went to the woodyard – all on my own!  I bought some plywood and batons for shelves, crammed it into the back of the Punto and tied it all in.  By the time I had driven it to the site and unloaded it was after 4 pm and I didn’t have the energy to do much else.


Spaghetti Wires


Sunday 13 March 2011

Sunday is our day, so we were up bright and early, unwashed and raring to go.  Dave stripped out the existing spaghetti wiring  - we decided not to trust what was there, and just surface wire from the batteries, so we knew what was going on. 

I set out to scrub the cooker.  It took a long time, getting into all those little crevices where food lodges over the years, but with a knife and a cloth and lots of scrubbing it came up nice.
By the end of the day we’d both worked hard, got grubby and needed to ablute.  The compost loo got its first use, and we both showered in the gloriously warm, high powered shower.

In the Dumps over the Digger


Saturday 12 March 2011

We put in a morning in the yard, having skived Friday, and got to the land about 1 ish.  On the way down the track, for the first time, we met a vehicle coming the other way – and not just any vehicle: this was a huge six-wheel truck with lifting gear.  It turned out to be the delivery truck for the soak-away, two big concrete rings to be buried six metres down.  All that concrete in our land, not happy about it.  This is what we saw when we got to the bottom of the lane.  Not a bobcat.


Michael and Alison had been taken by surprise as well, they’d expected the bobcat, but the Greek friend organising it had decided this would be better.  It went on for what seemed like hours.  I got very stressed, and eventually decided to go and tell them to stop and go away, but just as I got there, they were stopping anyway.  The whole area inside M&A’s enclosure (they’d put up fencing to corral the kids and dogs) was churned up mud and soil. 


To soothe the soul, I went foraging in the woodland, and found all these wild asparagus shoots.  They’re delicious, you can eat them raw.
We also decided it was time to inaugurate the electrical devices.  The batteries were charging nicely, so it was time to plug in the loo, and put a bottle into the fridge.

The Glory and the Power


8 – 11 March 2011

On Tuesday the sun finally came out, although it was still very cold.  Dave couldn’t resist going to check the water heater, so we darted up there before going to the yard.  The sun was on the panel and warm water was coming out of the taps – glorious!




We started work in the yard, and realised we had left all the tools we needed back up on the land, so I went back for them.  I took this photo on the way up the hill, thinking how very Alpine it looked with snow on the peaks (if you ignore the olive trees in the foreground).

On Thursday we heard from Tina and Shrimpy that they were back, so after work we went to their place in Geni to pick up the batteries.  They are small but extremely heavy, 27 kilos each.  Dave and Shrimpy loaded the van, and then we sat in the evening sun and had a glass of Tina’s home brew.  This shouldn’t have been a problem, but may have contributed to what happened next.  While reversing down the hill, Dave missed the edge of the road and crunched down on to the chassis.  He couldn’t drive back out, Shrimpy’s van couldn’t pull him out, and in the end, we just had to build up the verge with big stones until he could get back onto the road.

Well, we weren’t going to get to the yard on Friday – not with those batteries begging to be installed.  We ran into Mad Robbie on the way, and he decided to come and see what we were up to.  Engineers, huh?  He was fascinated by the generator.  Still, if Bobstock is going to happen ...  Have I mentioned Bobstock?  You’ve heard of Woodstock.  We’ve got a field, and a stage, and power – so we have to have a concert: Nidristock, I thought.  Dave’s son Rob got hold of this idea and revised it – his birthday is on 8 April – lets have Bobstock!



The batteries fitted nicely into their box, and Dave started wiring.


Meanwhile, Michael and Alison and the kids were also set to move to Goat Bottom.  They had variously considered and rejected an old wooden boat and a Mongolian yurt, and had eventually settled on a Winnebago.  More practical, but less romantic.  The Winnebago was there on Friday morning – much huger than we could’ve imagined.  

They asked if they could bring in a ‘bobcat’ mini-digger to level the site.  Well, we’d had a digger put in our driveway and level the top edge of the field, so it didn’t seem right to refuse.  They also wanted to put in a soak-away for the toilet, as the Winne was equipped with a chemical toilet which isn’t very nice.   Apparently the bobcat could do that too. 



Kieran’s contribution to the building site.
Thirteen hundred hours on Friday 11th: we have power.  It’s not easy to show electricity flowing – but that jigsaw was buzzing!










It was far too late to get motivated for the yard, so we stayed at Goat Bottom for the afternoon, too.  We built this plinth for the gas cooker to stand on and to store oven trays in.