Thursday, October 20, 2011

Double Rainbows and Golden Valleys



Although Hawaii officially claims the title of “The Rainbow State”, our high desert Placitas area furnishes some beautiful rainbow views to rival the loveliest of Hawaii’s rainbows. One recent morning this October, the residents of Placitas were treated to this double rainbow against a sky still filled with darkness from the refreshing nearly-all-night rain it followed. In addition to the vibrancy of this rainbow, the sun coming up over “our” Sandia Mountains also gave a spectacular golden glow to the Rio Grande valley to the west – allowing us all to imagine that our pot of gold was close by. We Placitans must be among the most fortunate people around as far as natural high desert beauty is concerned, and I, for one, am very thankful for this beauty!

Eva Marie Renninger
Office Manager

Monday, October 17, 2011

Julie, Tracy and the Bees




My daughter, Tracy, and I decided last winter that we wanted to keep bees, so we joined the Albuquerque Beekeepers Association and started learning about them and put an order in for 4 lbs.of bees. Apparently, that is about 4,000 bees and we had decided to use a top bar hive so we had a third partner build the hive and we were off and running. (Although you don't want to run around a bee hive!) Since we started this in one of the worst dry spells we have ever had and the bees did not have enough plant life to work with, we were determined to have a healthy hive. I think that comes under "ignorance is bliss", but onward we went. We learned that we needed to supplement their food with sugar water and have drinking water close by. I proceeded to buy plants that the bees really like, (the hive is at my house, not Tracy's house) in hopes that it would make a difference to their survival. It seemed to work; they have flourished and were doing fine. Then the robber bees arrived and took all their honey! Never heard of such a thing, but we made the entrance smaller and the bees were able to fight off the robbers and we are back to enough honey for the winter, just in time. In a couple of weeks we will not be checking on the bees because of the cold and will not open up the hive until March. More on the bees then. Julie Denison, Associate Broker


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Goldfinches in Placitas





From flowers to food, these goldfinches are loving the seeds from our late summer harvest of Maximillion. We spotted this mated pair having a feast. If you are a birdlover and/or observer, there is a cornucopia of wild birds here in the foothills of the Sandia Mountains. We started keeping a calendar to mark the migration of the birds. We also now know where the robins come during the winter -- our back yard!

Mindy Prokos
Associate Broker

Necessity Is The Mother Of Invention


Here I am in Anasazi Meadows (I'm on the left), standing with Diane Schuler, my customer from Wisconsin. Diane's husband, Craig, is a professional photographer, and he shot the photo of me and Diane holding some PVC from Home Depot, which we connected and used to determine where a 17-foot high house might be built on the lot next to the one they are buying. It worked! Necessity IS the mother of invention!

Pepi Strahl
Associate Broker

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

IT’S BALLOON FIESTA TIME AGAIN!


It’s a lovely time of the year in New Mexico – cool mornings and nights, beautiful sunny days and best of all we enjoy seeing hot air balloons flying around us on a daily basis for a couple of weeks in October. When I opened my living room blind, what did I see but a hot air balloon just below my property. When you see these hot air balloons, you just feel happy! Lynn Koch, CRS