One of my favorite parts of Permies is watching other people's projects develop. It's always a pleasure to take a gander at what
Joseph,
Evan,
Jesse,
Kai, and dozens of others are doing. For me, it's an enjoyable consumption that takes my mind off the chaos of my world.
So I decided it's probably time for me to start documenting my own adventures. I've been lurking here a while without properly introducing myself, so hi everyone!
About Me
I've been semi-retired now for three years this July. I spent my teens working with my dad with construction, my twenties going to college for Civil Engineering, and my late twenties working in technology. For my 30th birthday, I quit my ridiculously stressful job and moved up to the mountains to help care for my dad. I now split my time between caring for my dad, working on my ranch, and noodling with software now and then. Physically, I'm split between South Lake Tahoe (where I live), the ranch (near Kyburz), and Dunsmuir, where I own a house with my parents.
I say semi-retired because while I don't have a job, I do work on many longer-term investments. I started out with 6 months of living expenses runway three years ago, and now I have another 5 years in the bank. So far it's working.
Dunsmuir
My house in Dunsmuir is on 0.75 acres of river front property with pretty typical California Foothills weather. Mild winters with lots of
water and some snow and hot dry summers. Soil is almost non-existent. Our property was cut down about 4' from the road, so our
yard is about 2-3" of clay and then rock rubble.
My goals thus far have been focused on building topsoil and harvesting water. Since I'm not here on a regular basis, passive irrigation strategies are especially interesting. Longer term, I'd love to have a nice kitchen garden and small food forest.
South Lake Tahoe
This is where I spend most of my winters and any time during the summer I'm not at the ranch or exploring elsewhere. I have a normal house with a fairly forested backyard. It's a small house with a decently sized backyard in the middle of a conifer forest (fairly typical for Tahoe).
Leaping Daisy (The Ranch)
Leaping Daisy is my main affair June - October. It's 250 acres in the High Sierras around 6400'. Completely off-grid, bordered on all sides by National Forest. It used to be an old summer
cattle camp and has a few older buildings dating back to 1922. This will be my second year with the property, so I'm still in massive learning mode. The property is a mix of hilly, rocky pine forests and a big meadow with deep soil and a creek running through the middle. It's snowshoe/snowmobile only from December - May, depending on snowpack. The
land has been logged a few times in the past (selective), light grazing (cows have access to 80k surrounding acres), and even grew the state capitol's 1987 Christmas Tree.
I'm working on several layers with Leaping Daisy. Immediately, I'm working on forestry-related income — timber and Christmas
Trees. Next will be private camping / group activities (weddings, yoga retreats, backcountry ski huts, etc). We really are just looking to find a way to make a living from the property in some manner. I've also got some non-business related experiments with growing food going on. I'd love to have fruit trees and friendlier berries than the Sierra Gooseberry to snack from.
Longer term, I secretly hope I can turn my previous life's stock into real money so I can transition the property into non-profit that's something in between Krameterhof and an ecological resort for kids.
I think that's about it for now. I'm really itching to get back to the ranch. This year was an epic snow year and I'm still waiting for the roads to melt off. This time last year, I'd been able to drive out there for 3 weeks. My last trip about a week ago revealed snow drifts up to five feet along the road. Right now I'm contemplating hiking out with a battery charger, get the backhoe started, and try to clear about 2 miles of snow-filled road so I can drive out there again.