My cabin in the woods
Two years ago I bought this old house some kilometers from my home. I wanted it to be my little haven of silence and am thinking about building my retirement home there.
It used to be a small sawmill until about 1930. Later the lot was used as a nursery, selling vegetable seedlings, vegetables and flowers. It even had a heated greenhouse for growing orchids.
After the gardener died, the greenhouse was knocked down und parts of the lot were sold to neighbors. Unfortunately they sold most of the mill race, too. (Else I might have been able to restore it and install a turbine.)
Then an older, introvert man bought the house and the remaining acre of land and lived a modest life there, for the last 3 decades. He seems not to have cared much about maintenance. So the house was in rather wretched condition when he sold it to me and moved away.
It is of the grid, except a telephone line (no cell reception there). Water comes from a spring and electricity is provided by some solar panels with accumulators and a generator as backup.
As I am always short of time, things failed to move forward as I had hoped.
I had to find a better solution, a new permaculture element.
As a friend of mine looked for an inexpensive place to live, we decided she should move in and help with the renovation.
(Building law does not allow me to build a new home there until I have lived in the place for a couple of years, as it belongs to the exterior zone. So we have to renovate the place to at least make it habitable for some years. )
The desired improvements accelerated and in the meantime she was able to move in with her horde of animals.
Ready for calcimining:
The composting toilet before and after renovation:
We removed the wall between sleeping room and bathroom, to make the room bigger and brighter.
An old wood stove for cooking.
Window before (left) and after grinding and first layer of paint (right).
(You get an impression, what the whole place looked like.)
Part of the old shed turned into a hen house: