The last gardening thing I did in Wethersfield,
Connecticut at our now former house was to uproot the blooming yellow
dandelions that had appeared in Marsha’s and my otherwise healthy green front
lawn during the last week of April. My
first landscaping task at our new abode in Santa Fe, New Mexico was the same
one – except out here at the end of August the unwanted plants were only
slightly less desiccated than the hard, dusty dirt (I hesitate to say soil)
within which they were growing.
Mano-a-mano
eradication of the bright yellow weed with my snake-tongued weeding tool
manually had become pretty much of a joyous obsession with me over the forty
years that we lived in our former home – and it was a pleasure that I thought I
would have to leave behind when we moved to the southwest. So I have to admit I was actually overjoyed
at the sight of the “lion’s tooth” (from the French “dent-de-lion”) mocking me as I surveyed for
the first time what the house-seller was touting as a “natural desert”
backyard.
Marsha
and I spent the sixteen weeks in between the two houses at two different Airbnb
rentals in two different sections of Santa Fe that we had hadn’t visited much
at all in during our twenty-five years of visiting New Mexico’s capitol city.
Initially
we spent three and one-half months in a small “casita” (“little house”) in what
is called the South Capitol section of town, and the last fourteen days in a larger
place at the beginning of Upper Canyon Road.
According
to santaferealestatedowntown.com, “Rail traffic and an expanding middle class
fueled the development of South Capitol, Santa Fe NM in the early twentieth
century. A rich and appealing collection of single family homes, condos, and
small compounds, South Capitol charms with its architectural diversity.
Craftsman bungalows intermingle with Pueblos, Pueblo Deco revivals, Victorians
and Territorials. Construction materials run the Santa Fe gamut: adobe, brick,
Pen-tile (a term for hollow bricks formerly made at the State Penitentiary) and
framed stucco. Mature trees abound thanks, in part, to the WPA. Yards range in
size from postage stamp patios to 1 acre spreads.”
Many
of the streets, which we explored on a daily basis, follow the narrow curvy
contours of pre-twentieth century alleyways and paths. And several of the alleys remain as such with
tiny casitas along them. It was these
narrow thoroughfares that convinced Marsha and I that no vehicle larger than
the small Jeep Renegade we purchased out here could survive in “the city
different”.
Our
rental was a small one bed, one bath casita in a compound of six similarly (or
smaller) sized units on West Burger Street.
How small was it? I am 6’ 5”
tall. In the kitchen I could spread my
arms and touch both walls without extending my fingers. The queen size bed allowed about two feet on
one side and less than 12” on the other and when we did our morning Pilates
sit-ups the knuckles of my outstretched arms scraped the ceiling. Not to get ahead of ourselves here but
yesterday Marsha decided that most, if not all, of that casita could fit into
the living room of our new 2,100-foot house.
Then
for the second half of August we stayed at a larger place in the Upper Canyon
Road section of town, described by realtor site Neillyon.com as follows “The historic
eastside neighborhood boasts some of the most photographed adobe Santa Fe homes
and gardens, with some homes dating back centuries. Hosting a mix of
multi-generational families and newcomers, the historic eastside homes, often
hidden behind high walls and accessed by narrow dirt lanes, recall the city’s
early history and lend Santa Fe a unique style. Views can be scarce here, but
authenticity and atmosphere dominate. Long famous for its galleries,
restaurants and specialty shops, Canyon Road has become one of Santa Fe’s most
popular attractions.”
And
that is pretty much what we saw as we walked the streets early each morning. But interspersed among the “most photographed
adobe Santa Fe homes and gardens” were a lesser number of way-smaller, older,
less well maintained casitas that presumably still house one or more (but not
too many more) members of the multi-generational family owners.
“Throughout
much of its history, Canyon Road existed as a quiet farming community on the
city's outskirts. Its turning point came in the 1920s when a group of painters
settled on the then dirt road and began selling artwork from their homes. The
presence of these nationally recognized artists, known as ‘Los Cinco Pintores,’
slowly transformed Canyon Road into a thriving art community.”
Our
Airbnb was on Apodaca Hill immediately off Upper Canyon Road – an area referred
to by locals in the 1970s as “Dogpatch”, at the time an almost-rural, popular
party spot. But wealthy home-seekers started
moving in and began the piecemeal gentrification of the area. According to the
Santa Fe Reporter “In the late ’90s, many locals had to put historic east-side
properties up for sale that had been kept in families for generations due to
exorbitant tax hikes. A resident’s tax bill could go up 50 or 100 percent back
then and sometimes more, according to Santa Fe County Tax Assessor Gus
Martinez….
“…With
such expensive land up for sale, ‘your typical person,’ Martinez said, couldn’t
afford property in a barrio now considered Santa Fe’s upper end. Many Hispanic
families were displaced as a result. …. Now, a house could go for $300,000 in
the rest of the city; one in the barrio of yore costs upwards of one million
dollars.”
We
stayed in the lower part of a recently built house on a hillside (worth
probably two million or more) next to a similarly “fancy-schmancy” adobe – both
of which sat between which sat between (on one side) two casitas needing
renovation roughly the same size as our West Burger rental and (on the other
side) by a family house with cracked stucco walls and four perpetual-work-in-progress
motor vehicles in the driveway (which was basically the front yard). Further along the street were several similar
pairings of architectural style. “Santa
Fe charm”, as our city SF resident daughter-in-law describes it.
After
twenty-five years of visiting New Mexico’s capitol city Marsha and I knew that
neither of our two rental areas would be where we would settle down. And our realtor D quickly reaffirmed that “you
will not find the house you want for the money you want” in those parts of
town. But it was kind of fun to imagine
the possibility – even after one of the very diminutive casitas in our Burger
Street compound sold for $250,000 while we were there.
Our
plan was to rent for May, June and July giving us, we thought, more than enough
time to find our “dream home” (or at least some place where we could sleep
pleasantly). It wasn’t – necessitating
our move for the second half of August to Apodaca Hill because our Burger Street
Airbnb was rented to someone attending Santa Fe’s annual Indian Market (a really
big bucks, big show which draws ardent shoppers and collectors from all around
the world.) And during those three-plus
months, between open houses (our Sunday ritual), and what realtor D showed us,
we saw probably thirty candidates.
We
began our search in the same Casa Solana part of town that our son and
daughter-in-law have their home – not out of any “Everybody Loves Raymond”
fantasy, but because we really like their house, the fact that it is in a
“mixed” neighborhood, and its proximity to town (although not within walking
distance like either of our rentals).
But (a) there were not many houses on the market there, and (b) those
that were smaller than we wanted, or had issues that could have turned into a
bigger project than we were interested in taking on at this point in our lives.
Our
Sunday open house trips took us about thirty minutes from the city center and
into what in the Hartford Connecticut area (from where we were moving) would be
“the burbs” – an unincorporated part of Santa Fe County with a (probably less prestigious)
Santa Fe zip code and situated among the dry-land high desert rolling hills with
low-scrub-shrubs and stucco adobe style HOA communities distinguishable from
the earlier Tiwa and Tewa Pueblo Indian villages that the early Spanish
colonists saw by, among other things, the rooftop satellite dishes. (BTW - HOA is a Home Owners Association, not
the name of another southwestern pueblo tribe.)
We
seriously considered two houses – made an offer on one that was accepted –and then
backed out after the inspection. It is
never a good thing when you walk in on the home inspector and before
introducing himself he says, ”You’ve just got to see this.” We were able to get a copy of a previous
prospective buyer’s inspection of the second and chose not to go any further.
So,
as I am sure frequently happens, we upped our price range and on a late July Sunday
afternoon wandered into an extremely well-maintained house on Brilliant Sky
Drive (who wouldn’t love that name), and within days were under contract. It passed inspection with flying colors. We closed on August 16. Our furniture and other stuff from
Connecticut came on the 25th. The beds that
we had made for us out here were installed six days later, so we could have
officially moved in then. But we wanted
to see the final episode of the telenovela “Queen of the South” and there was
no TV connectivity at Brilliant Sky. Therefore
we spent that night at Apodaca Hill and officially took occupancy of the next
chapter in our lives on the first day of our fifty-first year of marriage
(9/1). (Not part of our original plan –
but much, much cooler.)
The
property overview from realtor.com describes our new abode as, “Located in the
Rancho Viejo Village, this lovely, light-filled home bespeaks the ease of
living here. Oversized windows pour sunshine into the living spaces and kitchen
from the secluded courtyard garden, landscaped to perfection. The curved wall
of the dining room gives charm and a view to the garden as well. A wonderful
space for entertaining family and guests. Minutes from the Community College
where classes and fitness facilities are available. And 10 minutes to Target!
The original Rancho Viejo village features a manicured park, space to share
with neighbors, as well as a small market. Don't forget the great trails and
open space available to the entire community. The Luminaria model was popular
from the beginning and now welcomes new homeowners again.”
The
house was “move-in ready”, Santa Fe adobe style, in a really mixed neighborhood
– and pretty much love at first sight.
It is landscaped with a variety of local flora, most of which we don’t
know and some of which we do (lavender, daisy, a small struggling rose) – plus
the aforementioned archenemy dandelion.
And
there was one more former friend, now an instant enemy, pushing up through the moistureless
sod in our “outback” – the small walled-in, west-facing, area from which we
(and our future guests from their guestroom window) can watch a largely
unimpeded view of the sun setting behind the thirty-miles distant Jimez
Mountains.
Our
new nemesis is grass – something that as New England homeowners we could not
get enough of, but now as a born-again southwest xeriscape cult members it is a
plant whose tinge of greenness assaults our eyes with the same sting as the
bright yellow of the dandelion once did.
So
the other morning, while inside the house Marsha watched the cable/internet guy
reconnect us to the 21st century, I knelt on my rubber gardening pad
in the bone-dry outback and, by hand, pulled out every tuft of turf that dared
to impinge on our otherwise one-hundred percent “natural desert” backyard.
And
you know, it felt just as natural as my last gardening act in Connecticut did.
Looks
like we’ve found a home.
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