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Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Travel, training, home


I made it home from Michigan about 9 pm Friday evening. All the flights were good – very crowded but good none-the-less. The weather in Michigan was actually better than Mama had over the same timeframe. I got to sleep one night in my own bed, then we were off to California.

Mama had begun packing Friday so all I had to do was get the things together for the training portion of our trip. I hesitated to take my work laptop but since I already had it with me, it made the trip with us. I packed the MacBook also on the off chance we could work two computers as we were being trained. That turned out to be a good decision – even though the computer bag I carried for the trip weighed nineteen pounds.

When Mama and I got the airport in San Diego I had to download the Uber app. I have never used Uber or any other such app, so I was a bit timid about supplying the information requested to set up for a ride to the hotel. We had been assured that Uber would be the least expensive way to get around, so Mama and I were willing to give it a try. It turned out pretty well. I requested a “pool” ride from the airport. Mama was skeptical when we first got to the car and found two people already in the backseat of – what was to us – a smaller vehicle. I gave her the front seat and I squeezed into the back. The very young couple sharing the ride with us were from London and Edinburgh respectively. We had a delightful time talking all things England and Scotland with them during the fifteen minutes of the ride. We did not venture from the hotel that night, instead we ordered delivery – Italian. It was very good and such large portions that we ate on it for both nights we were there.

We met Frank at the hotel Sunday morning. Mama and I were all packed and ready for training by 8:30; sitting in the lobby of the hotel watching people come and go. Frank approached us from the hotel side of the lobby – we were not looking that direction. We were a bit surprised to find out that Frank was already at the hotel enjoying a cup of coffee as he waited to greet us. Even more surprising, we did not leave the hotel for our training. Frank had us set up the computers on the long bar that was set up in the reception/dining area of the lobby and we did our two days of training right there. It worked. We had very good internet access. We had access to clean restrooms. We had access to water, juice and coffee. It was unusual, but comfortable enough.

Frank is a very pleasant, unassuming gentleman about my age. He grew up in a farming community in central California. His path to the business he now teaches was a circuitous one; rehab of apartments, brokering high-rise apartments and other commercial real estate, and finally retiring to tax liens and tax deeds. He is an index finger keyboarder who was dragged kicking and screaming into the computer age. A perfect teacher for Mama. We connected right away. His patience was charming and as Mama struggled at various points he waited, coached a little and encouraged a lot. The system he taught us works well for Mama because it is direct, simple yet thorough, and it is very efficient. At this point I do not see any improvements we will need to make, but time will tell. He provided us with a wealth of templates, guides, webpages to use for reference and a clear path to the information we need to make this business work.

By the time we stopped for lunch the first day, both Mama and I were at the point of overflowing with information. Mama worked the pc while I worked in tandem on the Mac. It was really good for her to do all the steps of the process as we learned how to find the county websites, narrow our searches and capture the information needed to evaluate the deals we found once we are approaching the auction date. All the templates were provided to us; we just had to learn how to fill them out, title them properly and set up the files to make them easy to retrieve. Our plan is to find 75 potential deals coming up for auction in March, see which ones of those actually make it to auction (some will be redeemed by that time which will take them off of the auction list) and determine what our max bid will be on the ones that do make it to auction, study the bidding process for each county and be ready to participate in the auction.

It’s a high bar.

Friday, February 23, 2018

Traveling, weather, quiet


I left the farm very early Wednesday morning to catch a flight to Lansing, MI. As it turned out, the weather here was more mild than the weather Mama endured while I was 900 mile north of her. On Wednesday morning, I had to scrape the ice from the truck windshield, but I did not really pay much attention to it. I fully expected that it would warm up and all the ice would melt into the greasy mess we are left with every time we get this kind of rain and accompanying freezing. It did not turn out that way. As the day progressed, the weather worsened, and offices closed, schools sent kids home early and the roads quickly became hazardous to impassible. Add to the freezing rain the flooding the area is experiencing, and Mama had a mess to deal with. The schools remained closed on Thursday, but our office opened at 10 am – for those who could get there. One employee had lost power and as of this morning was checking into a motel because there was still no power at their home. Meanwhile, in central Michigan, the weather was 40° F with plenty of sunshine.

Later today I will fly back home. I will get to spend one night in my own bed before Mama and I fly out to San Diego Saturday afternoon. We will start our two-day one-on-one training with an experienced investor Sunday morning and continue through Monday evening. Mama and I are both looking forward to the intense training. We need help interpreting the data and narrowing down the choices we need to be able to repeat over and over to make this business work. We are taking the red-eye back to DFW Monday evening, so I can return to work Tuesday morning in order to participate in another class.  By Wednesday, things will settle down somewhat and Mama and I can concentrate on applying all that we learned with our mentor. We have not set up our recurring weekly mentoring sessions because of the schedule I have had to keep the past few weeks. We should be able to get that done next week.

Nate, Cori and the kids left Thursday morning as soon as the roads were clear enough to let them travel safely. I do not remember what direction they are headed but I do know they will be back through at the end of March. It is then that we will have to say goodbye, From the farm they will head north for a few more meetings before saying goodbye to Nate’s family. Their plan is to head to Honduras the second week of May. They have raised 75% of their required support for fulltime service on the field. The goodbyes will be difficult, but not overwhelming. Honduras is easy to get to from DFW and Mama and I plan on visiting the work at some point – especially since we are praying about becoming part of the work at some point in the future. Only God knows the timing on that.

With the grandkids leaving Thursday morning, Mama had a very quiet day at the farm. It will take both of us some time to get used to the idea of quite mornings and normal days.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Cook out, little successes, the chase


We got word Saturday morning that our Chinese New Year Dinner had to be cancelled. Alex simply texted that his fryer had quit, and we would not be having the dinner. What we assumed was that the actual piece of equipment at the restaurant had failed and would need to be replaced – a very expensive endeavor. What actually happened was that the person working with him in the kitchen had quit and he was working the kitchen alone. That made more sense. We had scheduled to bring him some older hens over the weekend, but that did not happen because of how drastically his workload picked up. We grilled out instead. It was perfect weather for it. Between bus calling in the morning and working a couple hours on our business – with men’s prayer time thrown in – we had a pretty full Saturday.

Sunday started our revival. Bro. Dan Martin is the evangelist preaching the services. This year has turned out a bit differently for all of us. There is a lot of flu in the area and our church is no exception demographically. Even Bro. Dan came to us with some type of bronchial issue. He is doing his best to get through the preaching but it is clear that he is struggling to keep his voice strong enough. Even still, his messages have been poignant and powerful; though less vocally dramatic. Last night, his voice seemed a little better, but he struggled with a cough through the message. He simply asked a series of challenging questions, then shifted gears and listed a series of questions Jesus asked of those around him. It certainly got his point across.

Yesterday Mama and I kept the kids so Nate and Cori could take their travel vehicle and get the alignment and brakes checked. They knew it would take some time, so they planned a date-time around the repairs. Since Mama needed to go to Walmart, she took all the girls shopping and I stayed at the farm and worked while the boys played nearby. I was able to install the walkthrough door on the shop and weld up a gate on the fence we are installing for a new goat enclosure. The boys entertained themselves with a mix of Nintendo, trash collection using some plastic rods as spears to stab everything they found and eventually sitting nearby and talking. By the time the girls got home, they were ready for lunch. Me too.

Shortly after lunch, while I was working on setting posts for the fence I had installed the gate on, Mama came hurriedly out of the house yelling for me. Lin had called. He and Alex wanted us to deliver a goat and two chickens to them between 6 and 7 pm that evening. Mama was a bit overwhelmed by the suddenness of the request. I had to drop what I was doing and get things set up for the delivery. I saw it as an answer to prayer because we needed to sell out Billy goat and they were interested – at a very fair price. I backed the truck up to the back gate of the yard and loaded the dog cage into the bed. The cage for the chickens was already in the bed of the truck.

When the time came, Nate helped me drag, lead, chase, herd our stubborn little Billy across the yard to the truck and load him into the cage. He bucked, he flopped, he tried to run. I used a choker collar and leash hoping to lead him through the yard but eventually had to get my hand at the chain near his throat so he would not strangle himself and drag him every step of the way. It honestly did not take very long. It just felt like it. Now we had to catch the chickens.

We had all the help we could handle for that portion. All our grandkids wanted to participate. Blake wanted gloves and all Mama could find were some plastic, food service gloves. Mama scattered some bread pieces and the chickens gathered around her. That was the last time that evening they would do so. As soon as I caught the first hen, the rest scattered – and the chase was on. The kids dove, pounced, tried to corner and chased chickens all across the coop area. They even stuck out their legs toward an escaping bird as though they were a ball rolling across the ground. Over and over, the birds won the contest until finally, we caught three total.

The rest are now so traumatized that we will probable not get any eggs the rest of the week.

Friday, February 16, 2018

Feeling blah, our business, morning surprises


When I got home yesterday evening, I changed and headed over to our neighbors to get a bale of hay for the cows. Mama had told me the day before that Daisy was sifting through the stubble on the ground where the last bale had been placed, so it was pretty clear that the four of them had gotten all there was to get out of the last bale I had retrieved. A new one was in order. I took Bella with me so she could get some exercise. Mama has her a bit chunky. It was actually warm, a bit windy and 74°F. By the time I had gotten the bale of hay to the barn lot, taken the wrapping off and set the ring around the bale, Mama was home. She had made a couple stops in town before coming home. Once we finished feeding, I made myself a little bit to eat and we headed to my office. I had not felt energized at any point through the day yesterday. It was not that I felt bad. I just did not seem to have the energy to feel good. I would have loved to just sit at home last night, but Mama and I promised each other that we would be faithful to a schedule concerning this business – so I dragged myself out of the house so we could work. I was a good thing we did.

Mama and I almost missed a call from the person who was going to walk us through the process of setting up our company. We had both forgotten about the call so when the number showed up as we were on our way to my office to do some research, Mama did not cut off Maggie – who she was talking to at the time – to take the call. It was only after we got to work, and she listened to the voicemail that followed the two missed calls that we understood our mistake. That realized, we called customer service and were able to connect with the lady we had agreed to meet with to discuss setting up our business.

What we found out is that there is a lot more to the process than we realized. But I suppose if we are going to setup a legitimate business entity, the process should be a bit stringent. After all, we are building what we hope is a long-term business for this enterprise, so we should do our best to make sure the accounting foundation is as solid as possible. Looking over the notes I captured as Sharon guided us through the process, it may be a couple weeks before we have everything in place to operate as 4R9 LLC. Along with the initial LLC we are creating a retirement plan to act as both a 401k and a company profit sharing plan. It is a well thought out plan that will work in our favor for many years to come. It is also something I have always wanted to do; to set up a proper business…and to prosper in that business. We did a few things after the call -  mostly discuss our path forward and our preferred timeframe for getting all of this done - before we packed up and headed home. Mama and I got home at about 8:15 and I was in bed shortly thereafter.

We had an interesting morning. After realizing I had stepped in Mocha’s poop, I let her out of our bedroom and headed toward the front door to let her out of the house. The front door was wide open. Fortunately, it was warmish through the night and Sasha was camped at the doorstep – so we did not get any animal intruders – but it was alarming to find that the door had not been shut. Our front door is not loose fitting, so it would have had to have been left partially open for the wind to open it further. No one knows how that happened. Hopefully, we can keep it from happening again.

Nate, Cori and the kids should be getting to the farm this afternoon. They will be with us for a few days before heading out on their last leg of deputation. It should be a fun few days.

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Good and bad


I taught an eight-hour yesterday. Arriving at the training site at a little before 7 pm and leaving just a few minutes before 5 pm. The only time I sat down through the entire day was for a few w minutes during lunch. I was pretty worn out after I got done. It was a good class; great participation from the 25 participants which usually means that through every break I was talking with someone about something we had been discussing just prior in the class. No one lingered when the class was over, and I had used the time the test was being taken to pack up the computer and projector, so I was able to leave soon after the participants left. We had a special service at the church to get to, so I did not have much time to spare.

I got home about 5:10 and headed back out, dressed for church, at 5:30. Mama needed to be there early because she was getting Yilin and Cheyenne, so they could decorate Valentine’s brownies. When we got to the church, things were pretty well set up and the dinner and service did not start for almost an hour, so I went into the sanctuary and stretched out in out pew. I slept for forty-five minutes. It was a great help to make it through the evening. The All-church Valentine’s Dinner was a big hit. The church served, ham, fried chicken, corn, green beans, garlic bread and salad. There were at least thirty desserts. About eighty in total attended. Mama, Victoria and I sat at a table with Yilin, Cheyenne, Gracie, and Joseph. Great food, a great little sermonette and great fellowship. We needed that. By the time we got home, I was ready for bed.

I have been having trouble sleeping lately. This muscle injury in my chest makes it difficult to find and maintain a comfortable position for sleeping. I have had several nights of several hours in bed, a couple hours in my recliner and an hour not sleeping at all. It is starting to take a toll on me. But I have a holiday coming up on Monday. Maybe I can work a bit and rest a lot because Tuesday begins a week of non-stop travel, teaching and training. Most of that I am looking forward to. I can definitely say that I am looking more forward to Mama’s and my time in San Diego than my time in Michigan.  Fortunately, the temperatures there are not too cold. It will feel like the past few weeks we had here in North Texas. Also, there is not a high chance of rain, snow or ice for the days I will be on the upper peninsula of Michigan State. I was able to choose an airport near the training destination, so my commute to and from the site to the airport will be about an hour each way. Not too bad.

Mama and I are still anticipating our trip to San Diego. To date we have not received our flight information so I will have to track that down today. But, we are excited about the training. Hopefully, it will meet and exceed our expectations.

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Research, training, airtime


Mama and I had a modicum of success with our research last night. I elected to do the research at work because it is more comfortable in many ways. We keep the room warmer than at the church; almost too warm.  I have two screens/monitors on my desktop for doing multiple parts of the research. I know how to work in Excel and Word more proficiently than in Numbers and Pages (Apple products). That was one of the challenges when we used my Mac Book at church. On my work computer, we were able to cover a lot of ground and see some good results from the searches we accomplished. With Numbers I was not able to figure out how to sort the spreadsheet to maximize our time by eliminating all the information we did not necessarily want to sift through. It was actually a fun evening. Like I stated earlier in this venture, Mama is very good at this. Last week I asked permission to come to the office after hours to do the research and that permission was happily granted. That makes using the set up I have at work even more comfortable.

Yesterday we were offered several dates for our One-on-one training. None of the original offerings appealed to me and Mama because they put us too far out in March – coordinating with my required travel, the kids visiting, Chase and Makaila’s baby being born, etc., etc., etc. I settled for one and replied to the request letting the admin scheduling the two-day sessions that we were anxious to get going. Our initial choice would have used four days of vacation – not what I had hoped for. We got a reply shortly after my response that let me know that the closest date, the one we had selected, was already taken. However, there had been a cancelation and an even closer date was open if we wanted it. The only caveat was that it was a Sunday and Monday. Mama and I thought on it, prayed on it and decided to take it. That said, we will fly to San Diego on Saturday, February 24th and do our training the next two days. I have not received word when we are booked to come back to DFW but I requested the “red-eye” Monday evening, if available.

We also got a call from the company we are being trained by that we need to start our mentored training. That is a separate deal. We will get with a coach on a weekly basis for several weeks to be mentored on the investments we are discovering through our research. The only challenge there is that they want a guaranteed timeslot week upon week. Such a thing does not exist in our lives, so Mama and I are wrestling with how to pull that off. We have done so for FBI classes, but we were always able to rearrange those classes based on church activities and special conferences. We will need to have good internet access for each of those meetings, which also adds a level of difficulty to making the schedule work with Revival and Mission’s Conference coming over the next several weeks. Oh, well. If it was easy, everyone would be doing it.

So, our schedule is starting to get busy. Saturday, we have a Chinese New Year Dinner with our Chinese family. They already warned Mama that there may not be a lot of items that she would like. I am off Monday for President’s Day. That is a blessing. Tuesday is filled with several long meetings. Wednesday, I fly to Michigan to present a class. I will fly home Friday afternoon. Mama and I will fly out to San Diego some time Saturday and fly back some time Monday – hopefully. On top of all that we have Revival starting this Sunday, running through Wednesday. Of course, I will miss the Wednesday night service. I may have a twenty-four-hour break between flights - coming home from Michigan and flying out to San Diego.

Busy is good.

Monday, February 12, 2018

Friday’s mishap, Saturday’s revelation, Becky’s big win


I took the day off Friday. I was not feeling great, but I could have stayed at work – I just needed some time away. Mama did the same. There were not any young ladies at school that day, so Bro. Zach did not necessarily need her there to intervene. The weather forecast Saturday to be windy and very cold, so it was nice to have the extra time to work outside. We got a lot of little things done. One of those little things was to build a separate little area for the baby goats Lin and Alex were going to pick up at Trade Day’s. I carried some wire panels, helped shovel out the old goat manure, hay and dirt to tidy up the little metal building and drove a couple tee posts to stabilize the panel put in place to separate the little ones from our dwarfs. While Mama did some inside things, I worked on deepening a post hole for a portion of fence I am adding to the new enclosure we are setting up for our Dwarf Nubians. It was hard digging, but nothing I had not done before. After Mama rested a bit, she and I stretched out some field fencing on the pipe fence inside the new enclosure. By the time we had all that done I was in miserable pain.

Somewhere along the way, I did something that pulled a muscle in my chest and I felt like I was having a heart attack. The pain only intensified through the evening and night. I could not get comfortable anywhere, so I slept only about two hours – even though I had taken a strong muscle relaxer. I was finally able to lay on my stomach across the bed in the spare bedroom and sleep fitfully for those two hours. Saturday, I loaded up on analgesics and was able to cope but I was truly miserable. In order to make use of the time, I worked on our taxes. That turned out to be a very good use of the day because it took most of the day. That night, Mama and I went to the church, so we could work on our business and I would be available for the Men’s Prayer Meeting. For the first time we were able to find a house, do the research, run the numbers and feel like we actually accomplished what we were trained to do. That night I was able to sleep most of the night. Sunday morning, I was able to lead the singing, but by Sunday night, I was hurting too badly to lead the music through that service.

Grandma and Norman came over late Saturday afternoon. Norman is installing a set of propane logs for us in the fireplace. It will be nice to have that option to help heat the large room. There was a propane log set in the fireplace, but Mama and I thought it better that we buy a new set to start off with. Norman was able to get most of the fittings and attachments but had to stop short of getting it all done because of one little fitting. So, we’re almost there. Mama and I bought the propane by exchanging bottles at Walmart on our way to church Saturday evening. Mama is very excited to get the fireplace working – even if it is propane logs.

While Norman was working on the fireplace, Grandma talked with me for a few minutes about why she and Grandpa have been so mad at me and Mama. Mama was not surprised by what she said, but I was. She had to spell it out for me because as much as she insisted that “You know what you did.” I did not. As she explained it to me I thought, “You could not possibly be more wrong.”  But, I did not say it. At least we know now what has been festering.  I am not certain how to deal with it, but somehow the Lord will show us at some point. She asked for forgiveness because the had “ought against” me, and she certainly has my forgiveness, I just would like for the truth to be spoken and heard. Soon, maybe.

Rebekah called Mama Saturday to let her know that she had won first place in a chili cookoff. That was a surprise. I don’ t know whyt hat is hard to imagine – but she has the ribbon to prove it. Kudos Beck.

Friday, February 9, 2018

Internet, chickens and eggs


Last night proved the point to Mama and me that we need good internet service to make this business work. After another bumpy start, Mama and I figured out how to use the information provided to us in excel format to find the property records the lines of numbers were referring to. It took both of us to piece together the information and get it into the right search blocks on a variety of websites to make everything work, but we did. When we did, it was fun to look through a spreadsheet of 2500 listings and investigate only the ones we wanted. That investigation required a good deal of bandwidth to retrieve and display. Even thought we had a very a good internet connection, the pages were loading slowly. Doing those searches using my phone as a hot spot would not have worked at all. I had to teach Mama how to watch the progression through the spreadsheet as I scrolled through the listings. Once I showed her the way I watch the advancing lines of numbers she caught on quickly and we were able to advance much faster. When we had been at it for two hours, neither of us wanted to stop, but there were other demands on our time that evening, so we headed home. It was an encouraging night.

Before we set up to search for properties we went by the Chen house and dropped off the dog crates they will use to pick up a couple baby goats at Trade Day’s Saturday. They are very excited to use the new truck Alex bought. Any excuse will do to buy a good truck – especially if you live in Texas. Once we unloaded the crates we headed to the restaurant to deliver eggs. Mama did not want to drop the eggs off at the house because the eggs were not washed, and she did not feel that we could explain that to the grandma. Lin and Alex assured Mama that they did not mind the dirty eggs. Lin told us they had raised chickens when they lived in China, so they were aware of how to handle the eggs – dirty or not. That relieved Mama. It also explains why they are so fond of the farm-fresh eggs.

This weekend we will take them a couple old chickens. Alex has told us numerous times that old chickens make the best soup. He told me last night as we picked up the cage we use to deliver the old chickens to them that he has recently tried to order old chickens from their Chinese food supplier, but the supplier could only get young chickens for them. They were disappointed. Enter me and Mama. We let Alex and Lin know that we had six to eight older hens that needed to be taken out of the flock and we would be happy to deliver the birds to them two at a time at whatever interval was suitable to them. They are excited. Another win-win. The only favor I asked is that they would share some of the soup with me when they did make it. I remember the last time we took them an old hen, Alex bragged on how good the soup was. “Soup was very, very good” He told us. “Chicken was very tough, but good flavor. Old chickens have best flavor.” Giving them the birds is a benefit to us because Mama is going to order chicks in a few weeks. Culling the flock is a requisite to open room for new layers to grow up on our farm. Plus, it saves us feed.

This weekend is full. We will not get everything done that we have on our list, but we can try.

Thursday, February 8, 2018

The yuck


When I got home last night, I was focused on getting the music set for next Sunday, I normally do that on Tuesday evening, but I had gotten caught up in our research and forgotten until it was too late. The feeding required was not anything out of the ordinary, so Mama headed out to feed and I stayed in my casual clothing and sat down at the computer; neither of us intending that I should get dressed in my farm clothing. I was finishing up on the music when Mama came back in and announced that one of the traps I keep set in the coop had caught a squirrel. So much for not getting changed. I took care of our destructive guest and, since the winds were calm, burned all the accumulated items we had in the burn barrel; mostly feed sacks. We were on our way to church about an hour later.

There were a lot of people out of church last night. Our area, like so many others is suffering from a flu epidemic. Fortunately, it is not as bad here locally as some of the more crowded areas near us, but the effects are still noticeable. I have to travel to upper Michigan later this month, so I will have to take some precautions in the airports I will be passing through and on the planes I will be sharing with a hundred people each flight. Potentially, in early March, Mama and I will also be traveling for training, but I suppose the exposure risk is not too much higher than going to Walmart, handling the shopping carts, queueing in at the register, giving and receiving cash. Unlike church where people will stay home if they are sick, people will go to Walmart to get necessities even if they know they are sick. I don’t blame them, I just hope I can avoid them.

There are several people around us who have been battling a minor illness for several weeks now. Mostly they are snotty noses and light coughs, but the individuals in question do not seem to be getting better. Victoria is one. Zach Burns is another. There are a couple more I can easily think of. So far Mama and I have not gotten anything that has hung onto us for that long. Although, Mama has been dealing with a runny nose for a bit. As far as being sick, last Sunday I felt awful. I stayed home and slept most of the day, but all the malaise seemed to pass by late that evening. I have felt fine until this morning. I do not feel particularly bad, but I do not feel good either. There is a tightness in my chest that normally is accompanied by a cough. I am not coughing, thankfully, but I am not breathing well either. I took some elderberry syrup and our concoction of oils that include Frankincense, Eucalyptus oil and honey. We’ll see how that does. Hopefully, I will not be adding my name to the list of the walking sick.

All of the computer issues I and several other people were having at work have now been corrected. I was not overly concerned because everything I was denied access to was available to some users within our system, just not to me. An issue I was having with a travel site we now have access to as a company was corrected this morning and I was able to book the afore mentioned flights. I am impressed by the ease of use of the site. It will take a load off of those of us who have to make flight arrangements on a routine basis but will still allow the accumulation of miles on favored airlines. A win-win. So, all of the electronically generated problems are now behind me…for the moment.

Who knows what will come up next – physically or electronically.

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Trials, exploring, spending


Mama and I were disappointed by the last weather incident that wasn’t. There were predictions of ice and freezing rain, a slight chance of snow and the possibility that we would have the day off due to unsafe road conditions, but none of those things happened. It did rain last night – for about ten minutes. That was a disappointment as well. We desperately need rain. I was watching the claves in the field across the street from us kick up trails of dust as they played. I would expect to see that in July or August, but it is not the ground conditions I would expect in February. Oh, well. There is nothing I can do to change the situation, but I am starting to think that I should water my outdoor plants on a warm evening. They probably need another drink.

Yesterday at work was a difficult day – computer wise. I was asked to migrate some documents from one spot on our server to another folder on the server. I made the moves and was not able to open an of the documents I had moved. It was a bit frightening. I had spent days creating the PowerPoint presentations and accompanying Word documents and I was being told that the documents no longer functioned because of a directory issue. With IT help, some of the connectivity issues got resolved through the day but there are still lingering issues this morning. On the bright side, my boss, who really needed access to the documents, was able to get that access. These are not items I want to have to recreate, but I may have to none-the-less. It was not a fun time.

Mama and I continued to explore the websites we were given for our real estate business and quickly discovered that we need a more robust internet connection to operate effectively in most of them. We were working from home because of the weather conditions. In spite of the slow internet response, it was still two hours well spent but we are just now at the point of being able to ask the kinds of questions that will move us forward. I finished out our working time by continuing typing up the notes taken during training. I have not gotten through day one yet and have five pages of typed notes. I am finding it very helpful to go back over the notes, to expand where required, to spell out the formulas in words as well as numbers and to capture the thoughts behind the written notes. I do not know if we will ever refer back to these notes once we are grounded and succeeding in this business, but it helps to do a thorough review of what was presented. I am still amazed by how simple the formulas are.

While I was slaving away over the keyboard, Mama and Victoria got on Facebook and started watching the LuLa Roe lady introduce her ‘brand new” releases. I had already fussed at Mama a little because she made three separate purchased of clothing from as many sellers either Saturday or Sunday. Now she was begging to buy one of the newly released dresses. High neckline, black and purple, stretchy, bla, bla, bla. Even though I told her no, she was way over her limit for the year, much less the month, she reserved one to try on. Just to see if she would like it. For future reference, of course. I am just not sure how to stop the madness. But she did get a scare when we found out that our Discover card had been compromised at some point along our spending trail.

Unfortunately, that may not be enough to stop the spending madness.

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Stumbling, goats


While at the training, one of the suggestions to help us get started was to schedule time on our calendars to do the research we need to do to make the investments required for this to be a successful enterprise. So, Mama and I put meeting notices on our calendars to set aside two hours every Monday and Thursday evening. Right now it is not a difficult decision because the hours are after dark; however, in a few short months, during those hours it will still be light outside. I am curious to see what type of dynamic that sets up for us. Anyway, we dutifully packaged up our stuff and headed to the church where we can get internet service.

This was our first opportunity to focus on what we have been taught. Sadly, this session was more of a stumble than a step. We packed up the computer, the manuals and several other items but I did not have the tablet of paper on which I took fourteen pages of notes while attending the training. That is where the bulk of the information we needed was captured. We defaulted to a company website we were supposed to be given access to. I had that information with me. That did not work. I suppose our information had not been entered into their system yet. Mama and I called and left a message with our contact there. So, to make the most of time, we studied a map of states to pick six to investigate, cross-referenced those with county websites for population and then selected three counties in each of those states to begin our searches. It was not a waste. It just was not what we had planned. You have to start somewhere, and we did manage to get a starting point. We stumbled a little, but we are up and going.

When we got home, I started typing the notes from the training. There are a little less than fourteen pages of handwritten notes but I believe, as I take the thoughts I wrote down there and expand them to capture the background and supporting information consolidated in those scribbles, I will have ten to twelve pages of typed notes. My goal is to remember the intent of what I wrote and expand enough on that thought to make it relevant when I read it long after I have forgotten the nuances of the training. I want to remember the context as much as I want to remember the content. I want to use those as a teaching platform to bring others into this business – after Mama and I have succeed.

Meanwhile, back on the farm, Mama went yesterday to get feed. We were at the point of running out, so her timing could not have been more opportune. Before we left for the church we took all the feed and distributed it to the barn, the coop, and the well house. Any overage is stacked in a specific location in the garage. So far, we have not had any miscreant critters disturb the feed in the garage. When I take feed to the Nubians – where we have Solomon – I throw the empty sack out to the goats, so they can play with it. Solomon likes to rub his scent on everything that enters his domain. It is hilarious to watch him almost do somersaults as he drives his head and face into the bag as it lays on the ground. All the females dutifully gather around and watch. When I take the bag out of his enclosure, he tries to block my escape. Mama hates that part. I have to show I am bigger and push him back, so he will relent. I have offered to eat him but so far Mama has resisted.

We are about to inherit two other goats. Our Chinese family is going to Trade Days this coming weekend to buy two goats for meat. We will raise the goats for them to whatever size they need. I am not sure how it will work out. We do not know what size goats they are buying – whether they will be tiny babies or fully-grown adults. We do not know how well they will integrate with our established herds. We do not know what breed of goat they are looking for; if they will grow to be larger than our Nubians and dominate the herd. Added to that dynamic, we should be having babies in both herds starting in early March.

This should be interesting.

Monday, February 5, 2018

Training and more training


Thursday, Friday and Saturday were all spent in training. Only on Saturday did Mama and I get out of the training before 5 pm. It was a lot of very valuable information. There was so much beyond the information. Mama and I got to meet and interact with some wonderful people. We did not share contact information with too many because it is often difficult to maintain those contacts, but there are a few that we met there that we have a high probability of seeing in the future as we pursue this business. With the last expensive failed business model I got involved with, I was careful to let Mama lead the way on this one; not to suggest a strategy going forward or any hint at purchasing one for the offered mentorship options. We just listened and learned. Now I can tell you with confidence whether or not I can make money on any real estate deal - flip, wholesale, retail or rental.

The formulas given and tested on were easy to understand, easy to use and based on those who attended the training who have a background in real estate, were conservative in all applications. In other words, if Mama and I stick to using the formulas we were taught, we will generally be on the money or better off that the calculations suggested we would be. How to calculate rent in one simple calculation. How much it will cost to sell a house. How much per square foot it will take to refurbish a house – regardless of the planed use of the dwelling. All those were taught to me and Mama and then practiced in groups over and over until we really got it. That has always been the problem with real estate investing. How much should you spend? How much do you stand to gain? How quickly will you realize that gain? What do you do with that money when you do sell for a profit? It was a comprehensive, well though out training.

Every other business I tried, most of which involved selling a product or enlisting others into some sort of downline hierarchy, I have had to do on my own. Mama, although she could have been a help, was never so inclined. I have always looked for a business that Mama and I could do together. Something that sparked her interest. Something she felt not only comfortable doing, but that she had the skills to do well. When it comes to sorting lists, creating lists and shopping for things on that list, she is a master. We may have been led to the business I wish I had found twenty years ago. We will know in a week or two if we have found it; but I believe we have.

Victoria kept the farm going for us since Mama and I were out of the house by about 6:20 every morning. The hotel where the training was held was in just south of the airport. Traffic on Thursday and Friday was terrible. Thankfully we had a pass for the express lanes. That alone saved us thirty to forty minutes on each of those two mornings. It saved us far more than that on the way home on those evenings. We had time each morning to get breakfast before training started. The first morning was at Chick-fil-A; go figure. On Friday morning we tried Jack-in-the Box. We were looking for a Whataburger but did not see one. That is how we defaulted to Jack-in-the-Box. It was a pleasant surprise. We enjoyed it so much on Friday that we went back on Saturday. If you have not tried it, you should.

Since we had never been there before I asked the big black fellow in line in front of us what he normally got. He said, “I am in here every morning for a Number 26.” That was good enough for me. And it really was good. I tried something different on Saturday morning and enjoyed it too. We were served lunch on Friday and Saturday at the hotel. I am not sure what it cost the company sponsoring the training, but having dealt with that sort of expense, I would guess it to be between n $15-20 a head – and there were about 140 people in attendance; between two and three thousand dollars each day. All done so the instructor could have the class gathered on time after lunch. I was impressed.

We start implementing our training today.