Four years ago today, we stumbled into our new home, exhausted beyond belief. (For a review of that chaotic period of moving from our old place, see here, here, and here.) Honestly, we felt that move took a couple years off our lives. It's one of the reasons we've concluded we're never moving again, barring unforeseen circumstances.
We (mostly Don) have made endless improvements during those years. He graveled the driveway. He built a pantry and built a library. He installed the wood cookstove. In the barn, he's built two shops (the one Older Daughter uses for the woodcraft business, plus his "man cave"); built two storage lofts above those shops; built a storage room; and built a feed box for the cows. He addressed some enormous plumbing woes in the house (at which time he also built an outdoor shower) and we had a 500-gallon propane tank installed. He did some much-needed deck repair work. We had a massive yard sale to offload things we no longer needed. We fenced in a corral for the animals, fenced the pasture, and (obviously) got cows. Don partitioned the house, including a separate entrance and porch, for Older Daughter's quarters when she took over the woodcraft business. We fenced a yard for Darcy, began the installation of a comprehensive garden, and planted blueberries and peaches. He built a woodshed and installed a roof-runoff system for rainwater collection. Currently he's in the process of building what we're calling a "demi room," which is an outdoor storage closet.
And this doesn't count a plethora of smaller projects, most of them accomplished by Don: Building gates, repairing a clothes-drying rack, installing fairy lights on the porch, improving a jar washer, making a shelf for holding cook books, random graveling projects, trimming an overgrown grove of trees, things like that.
This upcoming year we plan to finish building the garden (including high fencing against deer) and construct a chicken coop. If time permits, he may even build a separate dairy kitchen for when I start making butter and cheese after Maggie has her calf.
Never a dull moment!
Those are truly amazing accomplishments. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteI always tell people.you can't do it all the first year
ReplyDelete......or the second....or the third. We're on our 12th year in Idaho and we're still doing projects albeit many smaller ones.
same here though we are in eastern WA about 30 miles from the ID border and 50ish from Canada
DeleteWow! So nice to see God blessing your efforts!
ReplyDelete