In a certain sense one can regard Esperanza, as deeply uncomfortable as it is, as a forerunner of the McMansions.  It was built as a second home, on a hilltop, with a commanding view, and is large…  The differences, of course, are a) it wasn’t built on an ingenious scheme of credits and mortgages but on hard cash; b) it was architecturally designed for its location; and c) the size comes from being designed to house a multi-generational family as opposed to DINKs (lovely acronym that).  It has also stayed in the same family for 140 years, rather than being abandoned after a decade for sunny Arizona/Florida.  Age creates respectability.  Or something.

Still, it was a little shocking today to realize that the people on the next hill over have cut down quite a number of trees, thus giving them and us entirely uninterrupted views of each other.  The property in question is a hay-field currently (it looks like they took out a hedgerow), but it could easily sprout a house or five.  This would be exceedingly unfortunate from our point of view, but my selfish side must wage war against my philosophical side: it is their property, and their right after all.   That I think it would be criminal to turn a ridgeline hayfield, a rarity these days, into houses is my opinion only.  (I’ll still whine) 

Might consider some strategic white pines…

* Or not, several generations of settlers, and several Thousand years of Native American settlement demolish that conceit.