Category: Outbuildings

  • Is this thing still on?…

    Is this thing still on?…

    Welcome back to the farm! Since our last visit, much has happened, and much has changed, so pour yourself a cup, and let’s catch up….

    Last time we were together, we had just wrapped up restoring our garage, and the barn and house were structurally stable and sound, for the most part. We needed to take a break from posting to IG or this blog, as we were just crazy busy with projects, and due to the more-than-anticipated costs of saving this home, I needed to take outside work. I’m taking my carpentry to the outside world, as well as helping a buddy with his excavation/land work business. (If you’re going to do something for income, driving an excavator through the woods is a pretty good gig.) While we fully intend to continue restoring this house to the extent we believe it deserves, we needed to focus on just that, rather than keeping up with the algorithm. We began to feel like IG was telling us what and how to post, so we decided to not play the game. We moved this blog to a more cost-effective hosting platform, and will concentrate our sharing through this site. This is also becoming a digital archive/photo album documenting the restoration of this historic home. IG also became such a different place due to the negativity of late. Not everything is as clear-cut and obvious as one would think. Some decisions are difficult enough without having someone tell you how you were wrong for having made a decision you had little choice in making. WE did not let this house fall into the state of disrepair it was in. WE are now the ones left to do what should have been done generations ago, but are now so much bigger (and so much more expensive) projects than they should have been. The thought of sharing something on Instagram that we were proud of only to be told that decision was stupid, or that we should have done something else, prevented us from sharing with folks that either could use our experiences to further their own restorations, or with folks that truly appreciated what we were doing here.

    So why am I posting this now? Honestly, I miss it. I miss the sharing of ideas and processes with a community. I miss the creative outlet of putting together this blog. I miss contributing to this archive we’ve created for this house. Keep in mind, this house came with absolutely no artifacts or anything outside of it’s own walls or anything that wasn’t nailed down (and in fact, much of what was lost was!) The previous families sold off, stripped, divided, and emptied this house of any tangible part of its own history. This includes prying off the original hand forged hardware on every door, interior or exterior. Only one original thumb latch remains, and you can see below how someone tried (unsuccessfully) to pry it off. A later owner did replace the front exterior door hardware with an ill-fitted knob that didn’t fit and broke off.

    They split up and sold all the land that used to belong to this home except for the bare minimum they had to leave as part of it. While descendants of previous owners still live in town (and are verbal about their displeasure in what we’ve done), nothing has been given to be preserved with this house. The tools used, photos taken, stories told, lives lived, history talked about, or anything else that was shared under the roof of this home for the past 235 years has been lost to time, pride, greed, and short-sightedness. This house deserves so much better. This house and its life is so much bigger than we are. It was here long before us, and with any luck, will be here long after. We are simply its current stewards. We don’t take the responsibility lightly. We are passionate about preserving what we can in regards to this house. While this is a sad reality, it is a reality.

    We have met folks who truly appreciate what we’ve done, and still are, doing here. We’ve met folks who have memories of this house as visitors or friends, so at least we have those stories to pass along to the future stewards. Knowing that we are saving this house for future generations IS good enough for us. We are careful about how we do things, careful that the methods and materials used are what is best for the house, and not just the cheapest or easiest option- most often the opposite. We love this house, and have committed ourselves to its preservation.

    Now that all of that is out of the way, we’ve had a very busy couple of years since your last visit- let’s get you caught up.

    Both of our long-time pets left us this past year- Toby, our cat, passed away in February 2024, and Tennessee, our dog, left us this past June. We adopted Toby as a nine-year-old cat, and he lived with us for over twelve years. He was always on the lookout for a warm, sunny spot to nap, and kept us entertained with his personality. Tennessee was found while we were in rural Tennessee on vacation back in 2013, and while he was in rough shape (he was an escaped “bait dog”), he lived a long and healthy life staying as close to us as possible (and going EVERYwhere with us) and exploring the woods and trails nearby. Both had bags of personality, and both leave gaping holes. For the time being, we’re remaining a pet-free household. We still have the chickens (9 hens and a sweet rooster named “Baby”), but they are pretty self-sufficient, so at least we are now able to enjoy day trips and overnights away without rushing home to care for pets. We do have some neighbor boys who look after them for us for longer trips.

    We’ve also done a lot of work around the house, barn, and land. We renovated and carved up the ell into a laundry room, a pantry, and a seasonal painting studio for Jenny. When we’re not working on projects, Jenny has taken up her lifelong dream of becoming an oil painter. She’s already been in a couple of local shows, and has gotten a few commissions- I could not be more proud of her! For her studio, we stripped and refinished the hemlock shiplap floors, first with a coat of boiled linseed oil, then topped with matte poly for protection and ease of care, being a painting studio. We closed off the tool room into a separate space- this room, which was open to the ell, is actually a part of the barn structure. We replaced the old rotted and broken stairs, built cabinets with heavy-duty drawers underneath, as well as pantry shelves behind a broom closet. We turned an unused roughed-in room in the ell into a laundry room, opening it through our back mudroom and pantry, to the kitchen, so we can get there directly without having to walk through the ell.

    Speaking of Jenny’s paintings, here are a few of my favorites-

    One of the most visually satisfying projects we recently finished was the keeping room ceiling. A while back we removed the old drop ceiling to expose the beams (and remove the dead animals – many a raccoon and squirrel family had called the place home) which left a maze of dangling wires and poop. The wires were moved to one side along the stairwell, which we then closed into a soffit using shiplap hemlock, which mimics the original planks. We installed plasterboard between the joists, and cleaned up the joists and beams, oiling them to highlight the adze marks on them from when they were cut. We could not be happier with the results- we smile each time we walk into that room.

    Another item ticked off our long, but getting shorter list, was building a fireplace surround for the parlor. This room had an old, broken cast iron insert, which we removed, along with the extra bricks that moved the firebox forward, and then we restored the hearth using hand-made water-struck bricks as were the originals. This firebox also showed damage from a fire behind the walls!- we’re not sure when (long ago for sure), but hope not to repeat! All the fireplaces, with the exception of the one in the other parlor (our bedroom) have now been restored. At some point, we will open up the bedroom firebox and restore it as well.

    We recently started work on the north side of the barn- replacing rotted and missing floors, replacing unsafe stairs, taking out the old outhouse, and adding a door and window to access the north side. We also replaced the siding on the lower wall, as well as this side of the barn addition. The rest of the barn and addition we re-sided a couple of years ago. We also framed in and added a couple of windows for the upper part of the addition, which is our woodshop. The north light that floods through these is just stunning. For any framing or structure, we always try to use rough-sawn dimensional hemlock from our local sawmill so it looks appropriate. Next up is the vertical siding on the barn- the old siding is two layers thick, and you can still see daylight through it. We’ll add a window in the (new) stairwell that will sit just above the one we added in the lower wall.

    We built a woodshed next to the barn driveway, so it’s easy to get to. Like most everything we build around here, we used rough sawn hemlock from our local sawmill, so it looks like it’s always been here. It’s large enough to hold about eight cords, or nearly two years worth.

    We’ve also done some not-so-exciting renovations, like replacing mudroom floors, but these are so necessary. Rural farmlife needs mop-able mudroom floors. Both our front and back mudrooms had old rotted plank floors, with huge gaps, and several layers of old flaking paint. We’re currently replacing our deck (which was horrifically rotten and unsafe- more to come about that in your next visit!), and we’re putting down new (level!) floors in the upstairs of the ell. We hope to clean up this space soon, as it’s visible to Jenny’s studio, which she will be opening to the public this summer.

    There will be a lot of exciting things happening here this summer, so come back often, and we’ll keep up with the blogs. I hope you enjoyed your visit, and I hope to see you again soon. Be well, and God bless!

    We’ll leave you with some memories of Toby and Tennessee, the last image is a painting by Jenny…..

  • Is it a shed, garage, or barn?…

    Is it a shed, garage, or barn?…

    One of the buildings that came with the property when we bought it was this little “shed”, as we called it. It was actually a one-car garage, c1920’s-30’s. A local told us that it used to house an early 1920’s Ford Model TT one-ton logging truck. Parts of such an old truck were found in the woods across the road, so that lines up. As a one-car garage, it’s a nice size- 12′ x 24′.

    This little building sat slightly below grade and lower than the driveway, so it used to flood, and it endured the indignity of having a tree fall through its roof, which was left sticking out of it for seven years! If you pull up the Google Street view of our property, it still shows the tree sticking out.

    With the barn and house needing so much immediately critical work, we had to just let this building sit for a while, but we soon decided that we needed to at least fix the roof so that it could hold out the snow and rain, hopefully preventing any further deterioration. Being just off the driveway, and close to the road, it was the perfect location for a garage, but since it was within the road easement (setback), we were unable to demolish it and build a nice, new two-car garage. So we were limited to fixing it up, but prohibited from changing the footprint. First up was to remove three or four layers of old roofing materials, then replace or fix the broken, missing, and rotted rafters and sheathing, then apply new asphalt shingles.

    With a new roof above us, we then removed the broken doors, braced it up, and used it for a while as a garage/carport. It still had a rotted sill, and most of the sill on the other side had been removed years ago due to rot and was replaced by two buckled and twisted 2×6’s. It was just sitting on stone (ledge) poking up through the ground, and after removing the large boulder that caused all the rot to the lower area (due to splashing), a good windstorm last year caused the shed to blow from its foundation. This caused further racking (twisting), so we braced it up as best we could, as we knew it would be a couple of years before we would get to a full restoration.

    Fast forward to this past spring- the opportunity finally came for a restoration of this useful little building. As so often around here, projects usually are undertaken due to something unforeseen, because of happenstance, or by priority. This project was also the case- we had use of a buddy’s excavator while he was on vacation, so we decided to use it well, and get started on restoring this building. I began by digging out all the stumps and rocks around the garage, and clearing out decades of forgotten trash. Then a building mover came to jack it up, load it on a trailer, and pull it up into the driveway, so that we could work on the foundation. 

    With the building out of the way, and having an excavator, tractor, and dump truck on hand, plus access to a gravel pit nearby, I began hauling in stone to raise the grade a foot and a half, and prep for a concrete slab. We decided on an “Alaskan Slab” foundation, which is a concrete pad shaped like an upside down bathtub, a foot thick at the perimeter. This allows the slab to “float” as a solid piece if the ground below should heave from frost. Traditional footings would have been difficult at best due to the ledge in the area, so digging was out of the question. Once the slab was poured, cured, and the forms stripped, we built a ramp so that the building could be rolled back home. We also added 4″ x 6″ pressure treated sills, bolted to the concrete. This old building was not going to get blown around again!

    While the building was jacked up and sitting on cribbing, we took the opportunity to replace the rotted, broken sill. As we often do, we took a drive to the local sawmill for some rough cut 4″ x 6″ hemlock beams, which matched the originals. Once we had the sills repaired, the mover came back and rolled it home.

    Once squared and bolted to the foundation, we used a heavy-duty come-along to pull the walls in (they bowed out at the top) and we pushed with a tractor to stand it up straight so we could brace it true and plumb.

    Having the garage back on it’s feet, it was time to address the grade- because we had raised the pad a full foot-and-a-half, we needed to raise the grade all around for water runoff. We hauled in 22 cubic yards of fill sand, then topped with loam, and seeded with perennial ryegrass. 

    Standing up nice and straight, now it was time to make it pretty. While at the sawmill, we also picked up some dimensional 2″ x 4″s and 2″ x 6″s to replace the broken, rotted, or missing wall structure and roof braces. Modern lumber would have stuck out like a sore thumb on a building like this, so we felt it was important to use the same kind of lumber as the original builder. Most of the studs on the east wall were rotted or cut off when the sill was “repaired” all those years ago. We also needed to change the framing to fit the new windows we picked up. The door opening was also beefed up as this end of the building was structurally weak, and would rack. The original gable window openings were cut in off-center for some reason, so we also reframed them so that the new windows would be centered. Once all the framing was repaired, we wrapped the garage in builder’s paper, installed the windows, then began installing new hemlock shiplap siding to match the barn. Having some Alaskan Yellow Cedar shingles left from the barn residing, we used those in the gable ends to further match the look of the barn. 

    Now to close in the garage, and build us some doors. We really wanted to utilize the same antique wood from which we built the barn door, but we just didn’t have enough leftover, so we went with new hamlock shiplap. We installed the shiplap smooth-side-out as opposed to rough-side-out as we did with the siding. We used hemlock 2″ x 4″ for the frames, and since they were so large and heavy, and we wanted tight gaps, we built them in place. Once built (on shims so they would not scrape on the ground), we installed heavy-duty hinges, handles, and a latch. We really wanted to use some antique strap hinges we had been saving, but the pintles (the part the hinges hang from) turned out to be modern, poorly brazed replicas, and would not hold the weight of the doors. If we ever come across some good antique pintles, we may change them out, or just leave the modern interpretations, as they work well. 

    So how is this little garage going to be used here on the farm? Currently, it’s the only flat, solid floor for me to work on cars, and being concrete, spilled liquids can be wiped up rather than soaking into the wood barn floors. We’re building a workbench at the back wall, we’ve installed some shelving, and we left room for a small wood stove on one side of the workbench for heat. I’ll roll my toolbox, jacks, and other auto repair paraphernalia out there soon, then set to work. There is not currently any electricity run out there, as we didn’t think far enough ahead to install conduit when we had the driveway all torn up, and now it’s just too big a project, so we’re thinking of alternatives. We’ve got a portable power station large enough to run some lights and tools, so that may be it for now.

    As far as the next project, we have plenty, but in regard to building, we’re currently using a Shelter Logic tunnel for our firewood, so a nice sturdy wood shed would be so nice. Looks like another trip to the sawmill….

    Thanks for stopping by- be well and God Bless!