Thursday, October 22, 2009

Pupz!

First of all, Patrick's post was insanely long.

In other news, Patrick and I adopted a little rez pup on Sunday! He is adorable! He's also very healthy, especially for a stray, according to the vet. We didn't realize how young he is- He's 25 lbs right now, but apparently he's going to be 60 lbs, in all his full-grown glory. He's half German Shepard, half Australian Cattle Dog.

Patrick named him Razz, after the character Raskolnikov from Crime and Punishment. It fits him well.

Here is a picture of Razz! <3

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

My First Post

So it’s been a really crazy month, but I’m going to try and start updating this blog as best I can. I know I have been in New Mexico now for over a month, but I figured I should start writing to let people know what life is like.

When I first got here, the transition was a bit difficult. I was not working and we had all sorts of moving costs –furniture was ridiculously expensive. I am living in Thoreau in a teacherage, which is housing they give to employees at the school. It is literally right next to the school (Erin walks to work). The place is really nice. It is a two bedroom place with a really big living room. Erin and I bought a futon, a dining room table and chairs, a couple bookshelves and recently a recliner chair. The chair we got from the Thoreau flea market that happens outside Family Dollar every Saturday.

Thoreau is an extremely small town. Like very small. Less than 2,000 people. We have two gas stations, two restaurants (both really small café-esque places), a family dollar store, a video rental store (Gabe’s), and a couple of mechanic places and that’s about it. The whole town is probably like 6 square miles. The town is conveniently located near the 1-40, which is nice for traveling to Gallup or Albuquerque.

Living in Thoreau is probably what I like most about moving out to New Mexico so far. The rural lifestyle I never thought would suit me, but it is such a fun town. There really is no one around….ever. It’s sweet. I go running and rarely do I even see cars pass. Not to mention we live right behind these big red rock canyons. It is pretty amazing. Everyone we know from Erin’s school or in here program lives in the teacherages, so it’s a great place to be.

Other interesting notes about Thoreau:

--Our address does not appear on anything like google maps. It’s like our house doesn’t exist. We have to give service people (like cable guys and such) pretty extensive directions to get here. Sometimes they already know the area.

--It is officially on the Navajo Reservation. This is pretty cool, but it’s weird in certain ways. If we get traffic tickets it apparently is not fully enforced. There’s an $80 fine. You can pay it if you want. If not, then nothing really happens since it isn’t state land. However, if you get a second ticket and didn’t pay the first, you go to Navajo jail for a day. This hasn’t happened to me yet, although I did get a ticket from a state officer in downtown Thoreau (which is state land).

--Everyone here has a vicious dog that barks like crazy at you when you go running or biking. Most people have them fenced in, but it’s pretty dicey. Like this one Doberman I have to pass on my bike route and I always think that if one day he gets through that fence, it could be major trouble.

--Everyone is really nice. And I’m not just saying that. The people even compared to Gallup or other towns in New Mexico are extremely friendly. This might be because more than 70% of the town are Navajos.

--Thoreau has probably the most mercurial weather I have ever experienced. It will be sunny and then all of a sudden start storming. It does make running kind of weird because you never know when the weather might change drastically. We’ve had a couple of interesting nights of intense heavy thunderstorms with flood warnings. But usually it doesn’t rain during the thunderstorms and it’s totally badass because you can see the lightning light up the sky.

--There are a lot of animals roaming around in Thoreau. Horses frequently come up to the teacherage and we see them on our runs or bike rides. Also cows or bulls from time to time. There are also a lot of rez dogs roaming around. Erin and I have talked about adopting one. Her friends Claire and Jenn have already done this. These dogs are all in pretty bad shape so there is a lot of incentive to bring one in. We’ll see though, I think we’re waiting to get fully situated first.

Anyways, I have been substitute teaching now for three weeks while I am being considered by the Gallup Independent for a job. It’s a newspaper in town. Circulation is roughly 16,000. I think the interview went well and I did a tryout newspaper article that got published, which also went well. I interviewed a couple cancer survivors; it was a pretty intense interview and article given that I’ve never covered non-sports stories before.

Erin is doing well in her teaching. It is pretty challenging. She basically teaches all day. Comes home. Plans. Goes to sleep. Then does it all over. They leave you very little free time in this profession. Plus the first year is really tough. But she’s making due. Oh and for those who don’t know she is teaching 8th grade social studies: American History. The curriculum covers Colonization through the Civil War and Reconstruction.

Erin and I usually spend weekends doing something fun. So far we’ve visited Albuquerque a couple of times, Farmington to the North, Zuni pueblo to the south and Chaco Canyon. I might do separate blog entries for some of these places, because they were very cool. Especially Chaco Canyon where there were some really cool hikes to awesome ruins from the Pueblo people who lived from approximately 900 to 1150 A.D.

Well I’m gonna wrap this blog entry up because I don’t want my first one to be too long. I will update it regularly as interesting stuff happens. I will do retroactive posts for the cool things we’ve done out here so far and try to get as many pictures in here as I can.