My husband and I came up to our mountain house at the beginning of June. Nearly all our San Pancho friends had left for their northern homes, and for excellent reason—it was way too hot on the coast. The ones who stayed were all found, upon close questioning, to have air-conditioned bedrooms. We do not, given that our bedroom only has one and a half walls. The day came when life was no fun at all and desultory plans to move up to the mountains shifted to let’s-get-out-of-here mode.
But when we arrived it was hot up here, too. A mile of altitude, intense sun, steep cobbled streets, and as yet no rain—a walk to the store and we dragged in overheated. However, our house was dim and cool and the nights required a quilt. It had been no mistake to make the move.
The garden was glorious. Rose, gardenia, agapanthus, plumbago, hydrangea, geranium, bougainvillea, impatiens, begonia, calla lily, zinnia, hibiscus, nasturtium, trumpet vine, and more, whose names I don’t know, were all blooming. Especially grand were the datura trees, as I call them, with their pendant flutes of exquisite fragrance. One is twenty feet high and greeted us with a good 300 blooms.
This beauty is accomplished by having a gardner, hose in hand, all winter. We are symbiots with our mozo Marcelino—our garden survives; his daughter gets a quinceaƱiera, the traditional fifteenth birthday celebration for those girls whose parents can afford it.
The rains arrived right on schedule and none too soon as I had begun thinking about those stories from India where people go crazy waiting for the monsoon and start hacking up their neighbors. Not Marcelino, of course. One night, mid June, there was spectacular downpour and it has rained every day since. The output ranges from thunder and lightning storms to the gentlest mist. The eaves and drainage channels may run floods of water or one’s hair may wear no more than a net of droplets after half an hour outside. There may be a sprinkle around five in the afternoon, or it may rain for several days running.
The heated ocean evaporates, the saturated air rolls in over land and, cooling, condenses into rain. Weather 101. San Sebastian sits in an amphitheater of mountains with the ocean as stage, and we don’t miss a drop. The rains come and a few hours later the miracles begin. Resurrection ferns emerge from every cranny of the stone walls. Moss goes from russet brown to electric green. Mountains erupt with purple flowering vines atop fresh-leaved trees. Tiny white and yellow orchids appear on branches. Pink crocus-like tempranillos cover hillsides. Orchid cacti sprout fleshy blooms from the nodes of their thick leaves. And the weather is perfectly cool.
Now the rains are doing the job of watering the garden, but they are not an unmixed blessing. Bougainvillea decide to take a blooming break, geraniums have to be put under cover. Double hibiscus fill with water and hang upside down, as do the grander floribundas. Zinnias are beaten over and have to grow J-shaped stalks to reach their preferred orientation. And some plants just rot and die no matter what you do.
The rains are a mixed blessing for the people, too. In our first year we lost access to the contents of our drawers when the wood swelled. Now we know to keep drawers slightly open but not how to keep mold from dusting leather chairs, cloth-bound books, carpets, canvas of paintings and wooden furniture. When the clouds descend to the level of the village, I must quickly close doors and windows so the white billows don’t roll inside and soak the beds and sofas. A frequent topic of conversation, in the warm candlelight of an evening, is how to deal with the incessant electrical outages. We never know when landslides will trap us up here for hours or even days.
But picture this: Our house, built in imitation of the local rustic colonial style with tile roof and approved slopes, does not leak. We curl up under our covers and couldn’t care less if it pours all night.