This is the complete version of
Down on the Farm.
There were several errors made in the three previous chapters, and I have attempted to correct them all and simply publish this as a complete short story. I hope that you'll enjoy it.
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Oh, good Lord, what had I bought?
The price was right: 7Β½ acres, right on the river, with a livable house, all for $75,000 cash. The taxes were super low, a hair under $800 a year, and the acreage was almost all river bottom land, very fertile. There was a working well on the property, and I should be able to grow my own veggies easily.
There was only one thing that really concerned me about the house, which I knew was a fixer-upper: had it ever been flooded? The previous owners said that it never had been, but they bought the place in 1995, and couldn't swear to what had happened before that. I opened up the crawl space before I bought the place, and found just what I needed to find: a raw wooden frame around an inner door opening. If the house had ever been flooded, I would see a stain on that frame. It was clear, so I knew that even in the worst flood along the river, the water hadn't reached the house. Mean river level was at 604 feet, according to the Corps of Engineers, and the topographic map had the house sitting at 625 feet, so I thought the house would have been safe, but I still had to check.
So, I took the $75,000 I had, and bought myself a small farm. This meant no house payments. Insurance was cheap, and I already told you about the taxes.
In the four months before I was able to move to the farm, I went ahead and had a contractor erect a three-bay pole building, with two overhead garage doors, and the third bay just had windows and a man door. The contractor ran electricity to the building for me, and installed a breaker panel, but that was as far as it went.
Moving was a pain, coming down from the Poconos, a ten-hour drive. My furniture had been old, and kind of on the shabby side, so, other than my bed, it went to the dump; it wasn't even good enough for Goodwill!
My tools, on the other hand, were valuable, and bulky. I filled my truck, plus a trailer, stuffed to overflowing, but managed to get everything I wanted to keep in one load. Unloading my tools into the new pole barn was the most important thing, because to fix up my fixer-upper, I was going to be using every tool I had.
Fortunately, I had picked up a lot of different skills over my 44 years of life. I didn't have a license, but I could do the electrical just as professionally as any electrician. I wasn't a licensed plumber, but I could do the plumbing, and it not only wouldn't leak, but it would look as neat as any plumber could do. My carpentry skills were good, I could hang drywall, I could really do just about anything that I'd need to do. It was just too bad that I'd have to do all of it alone.
Well, after getting settled in -- sort of -- I had to get to work on the place. The bathroom worked, and the bedroom was good enough for now, but the kitchen, living room and den were disasters, the kitchen being the worst. The floor joists in the kitchen had sagged a bit, and while I knew how to fix them, it was going to be a pain in the ass. I had to take up the whole floor, dig out two square footings, and pour concrete in them. After the concrete cured, I'd have to set two short posts to support a beam, to jack up the floor joists. Thing is, I had to use hydraulic jacks, and lift the beam before I could cut the posts to length and set them in place.
Fortunately, the beam needed to be only sixteen feet long, and I could manufacture it myself, using four sixteen foot 2 x 8s. Three would probably have done the trick, but I'm not a structural engineer, and it was cheaper to just add a fourth board than hire an engineer to tell me that three would be enough!
Digging the footings was no fun, no fun at all. They needed to be three feet by three feet, and eighteen inches deep, and I was standing in between the floor joists, which were only three feet off the ground. Not fun, not fun at all. I managed to get both of them dug in one hot, sweaty, miserable day. Since it was just a crawl space, I could just scatter the dirt I removed, without having to get it out of the house.
It was around three in the afternoon when I got done with that job, and I needed a break. Normally, I'd grab a shower, but then I thought, you know, I bought this property on the river, I ought to enjoy the river! When I got out of the hole that used to be the kitchen floor, I grabbed my water shoes -- no telling what was on the river bottom around here -- and a towel, and headed down for the riverbank.
I was lucky: while it wasn't sandy, I did have one small section of my shoreline that could be called a beach, even though it was mostly mud and rocks. There was already an old picnic table down there, so I'd have a bench on which to sit to take off my work boots and socks, to put on the water shoes. I was wearing shorts rather than jeans, and hadn't had a shirt on all day, so I was good to go.
It was a good 300 yards down to the river, out in the hot sun, but the bank itself was lined with trees, and the shade felt good. I got down to the picnic table, pulled off my boots and socks, and put on the water shoes to wade into the river. I got right to the water's edge and looked around; there wasn't a soul in sight and, being a weekday, if there weren't any boats on the river that I could see, there's almost certainly be no one coming around the bend.
Well, I'd been to the nude beach in Sandy Hook before, and when I was married, my wife and I had been to Sunny Rest Nudist Resort a few times. I liked going nude, and, like I said, there was no one around. No sense getting these shorts wet, and, it was a good thing I decided to pull 'em off, because I remembered my cell phone in the pocket when I did; it sure wouldn't have been a good idea to go swimming with that in my shorts pocket. I headed back down to the water, and there was still no one in sight as I waded in.
The river was wide, but reasonably shallow. It might have been twenty feet deep by the time you got to the middle, which was the old shipping channel -- the commercial traffic had ended back in 1998 -- but I was probably fifty feet from the bank and it was still not quite six feet deep. The water was nice and cool, and I just lazed around, sometimes bouncing on the balls of my feet, and sometimes floating on my back.
This was just what I needed! The water was refreshing, and even if it wasn't shower water clean made me feel as good as if I had just gotten up in the morning.
"Hi, there!"
What?
Who was that? Oh, crap, a kayak had come around the bend, and there was a woman paddling toward me. Well, I was in deep enough water that she couldn't see I wasn't wearing anything. I didn't really care if she saw me nude -- thousands of people had, at the beach -- but I didn't want to offend her, and I didn't really know that, if she was a real prude, she might not call the sheriff.
"Oh, hi, how are you? I'm Richard." She was paddling closer.
"Hi, Richard, I'm Gina, well, Virginia, but everybody calls me Gina. Looks like you've found a better way to cool off than I have."