The Wall

Here at ExhaustNotes.us we are all about the motorcycle, with a smattering of gunplay and interesting adventure destinations thrown in to keep the place hopping. But what if there were no bikes, adventures or bullets? What then? Keep reading and I’ll tell you what then, Bubba.

Concrete, my friends, and the mixing of it is the solution to a lackluster moto-life. Dusty and powder soft with an aggregate backbone, believe in it and concrete will provide. Trust in it and it will repay you a thousand times. The grey dust keeps me going because lately I haven’t been riding motorcycles or watching Emma Peel on YouTube so there’s nothing to write about except the grey dust. The grey dust keeps me hoping for some far-off, much better two-wheeled days.  Think of this as an ExhaustedNotes blog.

Situated in the steep-ish foothills of the Sacramento Mountains, Tinfiny Ranch is slowly bleeding into the arroyo, you know? You put down your cold, frosty beer and the next thing you know your Stella is halfway to White Sands National Monument. On the lee side of The Carriage House we’ve lost a good 18-inches of mother earth because while it doesn’t rain often in New Mexico when it does rain it comes down in buckets. This sudden influx of water tears through Tinfiny Ranch like freshly woken kittens and sweeps everything in its path down, down, down, into the arroyo and from there on to the wide, Tularosa Valley 7 miles and 1500 feet below. Claiming dominion over the land is not as easy as they make it sound.

So I put the motorcycles away and took a cudgel to Tinfiny. I pounded, I dug, I formed and I poured. I am building a wall and Mexico has not stepped up to the plate with the promised assistance. The thing has grown to 70 feet long and varies in elevation from a foot to 4 feet high. Repetition has honed my skills: I can do 8-feet of wall every two days and the days stretch on and on. I figure I’ll stop when I run into the Pacific Ocean.

After the wall is up the resulting divot will require filling with dirt. I have lots of dirt on Tinfiny Ranch; the conundrum is where to borrow it from without causing even more erosion. I’m hoping that leveling the back yard will provide most of the needed fill.

I’ve made the wall porous to keep water from backing up behind it and poured L braces in an attempt to keep the wall from toppling over. The beauty of the wall is that it will work in any orientation. I’m nearly ready to start the slow process of dumping dirt and compacting it 6-inch layer by 6-inch layer until the land is even with the top of the wall. At that point the floodwaters should flow over the wall spilling into the arroyo. Unless, of course, the hill becomes so saturated that the entire wall slips into the arroyo. And I become one of those questing specters drifting the canyons wailing my banshee wail, never resting, never finding peace.

9 thoughts on “The Wall”

  1. Haha Joe your story inspired me to hire a wino next time I’ll talk to the Federalis. On the Mexican side see mabe you can get some pesos for the wall you probably be able to buy flowers with the pesos . Pesos keep devaluating .Jaja nice job and story

  2. Interesting how so many consider walls as something that divides but yours is built to keep stuff together. But would railroad ties do the same thing? That’s what get used in New England……

  3. Here, RR ties are $28 each for good ones. Old termite eaten ones are $18.

    It’s actually cheaper to use block & concrete.

    More labor though.

    1. When I was a kid in high school, I worked in a farm and garden center in New Jersey. We sold a lot of stuff for landscape work, including railroad ties. I hated working with those things. They were heavy and sticky. Taking one off a truck one time I dropped it and it crushed my middle finger, which damn near made driving in New Jersey impossible (I had to rely on my horn instead of that middle finger to get other motorists’ attention, and the horn just didn’t have the same impact).

      1. If you get fresh ties they are a mess to deal with. The old rotten ones don’t have much juice left.

  4. I built a rail tie wall in the 60’s with my dad in Missouri…a lot of work. The thing still stands and holds up the bank between two houses to this day. Probably 80 feet long and with two levels in a couple of places 8 feet or more high. You wall looks better and I bet will last a long time!

Comments are closed.

Discover more from The ExhaustNotes Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading