Arriving

The view as you pull onto our acreage

We finally reached the end of July and closed on our acreage. We signed the papers and received the keys. It was ours! The next day we arrived with two minivan loads of stuff, prioritizing what to bring for the first weekend. Food, table, chairs, music, tools, our most important camping equipment, bedding, clothes, and a few adult beverages. We got to thinking what to bring up the next time, making a list of what we were lacking. This list making continued for several weeks until we had most all of the essentials we needed to run a household. As we walked around our property the first few times it was as if in a dream, cliched but true. We counted 130 trees, the majority of them white willows. Beans were planted around three sides of the adjoining fields, with corn to the south. We could see other clusters of trees on the horizon, indicating other acreages or farmsteads. A wind farm of dozens of turbines stood miles off to our southeast, and at night the red lights mounted on top of them would blink in a synchronous rhythm. Relaxing on our back porch, taking in all the sights and sounds, left us with little to say as the reality of finally reaching our goal began to set in. The most we could do is look at each other, shake our heads, and smile.

Planning

Map of Iowa

The lady we were buying the acreage from asked for two months to close so she could have a sale and move. I got the impression she did not think her property would sell so quickly. Shelly and I had plenty of time to begin packing and preparing our house for the market. Our house was paid for and we decided we would take our time moving so we could do most of it ourselves and not be rushed. Shelly had to keep coming back to the city anyway to work a set number of days in the office for her job. I had been working out of our home for a few years so I would be able to travel back and forth with her and stay in the old house, getting our two minivans packed for our next trip back to the acreage. So we would drive two fully loaded vans the 100 miles to our new acreage, unload, stay the weekend, then drive both vans back to the old house and do it all over again. As we cleared out the old house I would also make the mostly cosmetic repairs needed so that once it was empty it would be ready to sell. The money from the sale of the old house would pay off the mortgage we would have on the acreage. A simple and easy plan that turned out not to be so easy.