The Big Freeze

Well, we’ve had one of the coldest stretches in many years. Over 84 hours below freezing, with lows in the single digits for three consecutive nights. Being that cold for that long has different challenges when you are off-grid. While we had a few issues, we will give thanks to God the Father for the blessings He has provided.

First there are battery considerations. The cold can drain batteries down quickly. We ran the generator a part of every day to ensure the battery bank stayed fully charged.

Then there is the plumbing. We worked diligently to insulate the pipes and water fixtures, but we didn’t imagine the 500 gallon tank would freeze. While it didn’t freeze solid, the ice was several inches thick inside the tank. So we surrounded it with burn barrels and kept fires going until it thawed. After thawing, we went to the co-op to get straw bales to provide insulation for the tank.

Unfortunately, some damage was done to the pump through that whole process, lessons learned. We will be upgrading our water solutions, and replacing the pump as well as moving it to a more sheltered location.

1600 gallon water tank

We will be adding this 1600 gallon storage tank to the existing 1550 gallon tank that is in the watershed. Then move the 500 gallon tank from the side of the cabin into the watershed as well. Trenches will be dug and water lines will be buried.

We also worked on the firewood supply for next winter. Tim got about half of it split and we stacked it in the old woodshed. There is still a LOT of wood to split.

Being off-grid means freedom, self sufficiency means freedom. Freedom means a lot of hard work.

Yes we had damages, nothing like it could have been, tank had many blessings starting with the cost – story, thankful we had the generator and it started in such cold weather, found parts to fix existing issues and make it better….may be more I overlooked but God has watched over and protected us and given us so much to be thankful for despite the bumps in the road.

Running Water

After several years of a 5 gallon bucket, composting toilet, we have running water. And an actual flush toilet! Plus a shower, which is a game changer when we spend more than one or two nights in the cabin.

There are still a few things that we need, a hot water heater, the ceiling finished, but it’s “livable”.

Up next, starting on the big house.

Almost There

We made an enormus amount of progress over the summer and fall. We are now 90% complete and have started sleeping in the cabin when we are down there working on it.

At the end up April 2022, we upgraded the trailer to match the capacity of the F350. This will facilitate hauling larger logs for sure.

In May, we got windows installed, 99% of roof completed, installed cedar on ceiling of porch and deck, hung lights round the barn. We also upgraded the backstop on our firing range by using cutoffs from the sawmill. We also repurposed part of a metal shipping crate to hang a gong.

In June, we finally milled a couple of the logs we harvested in April. Turns out it was wild cherry. Very beautiful, smooth grain. These made some beautiful slabs, one of which will become a kitchen counter in the cabin. The saw mill went down during this operation. One of the standard blade guides had a bearing go out. Luckily we had the ceramic upgrade kit. We also stained the outside of the cabin a light gray, trying to get as close to old barn wood as we could.

During June-August we also got the front door framed out. We milled a poplar log that was down for about 18 months, this will be used to build the doors. It took through the month of July into early August to get them built out, hinges mounted, door knobs installed then hung on the frames. These are heavy doors and we had to use 16 inch barn door hinges with bolt on pivot. Back door is solid poplar, front door is poplar panel with walnut cross pieces. I thing sycle has gone above and beyond in creating beautiful doors to secure our little cabin in the woods. We also started installing the insulation and cedar ceiling in the cabin. It is slow going, this is not cedar that we milled, we purchased 1/4 inh tongue and groove and it is not easy to work with, very fragile.

September saw challenges in installing the wood flooring. Our order was shorted by two boxes so we had to be very careful and strategic with our cuts and placement. And just before we got to the halfway point, our 20 year old flooring stapler bit the dust. We lost 2 hours of work while we went in search of a replacement. Due to the remoteness of our property, it takes forever to make a trip “into town”. When we returned to finish the job, we found that a copperhead had taken up residence in the cabin, no telling actually how long he had been hidden there. But I’m sure he made a good dinner for the local possum when we tossed his broken carcus into the woods. We also purchased a woodstove for our heating source. Yay! no more kerosene. September was also a month of clean up, collecting oak and hickory from trees that were either dead or knocked over by storms. “Free” fireword is very labor intensive. Betty helped with so many projects at the farm as well. In just two 10 hour days, she and sycle accomplished so much: firewood gathered and split, kindling cut from scraps, shoe mold in cabin, weed eating, purchased a mattress and boxspring (YAY no more cots), covered spaire trailer tire to protect from dry rot, measurements for curtains. I’m sure I’m leaving somrthing off the list. Most weekends in September had some form of firewood work, gathering, splitting, stacking, etc. Not sure we’ll have enough for the winter. Not even sure we’ll have enough for deer season…

Wiring work and caulking began in October. Because the logs are flat stacked, there really aren’t large spaces that would require chinking but we do have small gaps that require caulk. October was also the beginning of Krav Maga Black Belt Bootcamp for sycle. This greatly limited his time at the farm through mid-December when he did earn his Black Belt, First Degree. So getting to the farm early Saturdays and working through the day, returning home early Sunday morning made for some exhausting weekends. This also cut into our deer hunting, but that is okay as the black belt was a priority. We got three circuits run in the cabin, wall plugs, ceiling lights, gfi for back porch. Nice progress but we also said farewell to our old girl Shadow and laid her to rest next to her brothr Hiro. We continued to split wood, pine scraps for the firepit, hardwoods for the woodstove. And the lights in the barn started acting like they have a connection loose. We killed the breaker and will have to troubleshoot at a later date.

November was about cleanup and organization. We needed to get the generator into the barn but it was so cluttered that we needed to cleanup first. We moved the wood stove into the cabin, staging it for install. Installed some shelving in the barn and picked up everything off the floor and organized it. We did manage to get a hunt in the weekend after Thanksgiving. In 3 days hunting we saw no whitetail, which is odd, but with clear nights and an opening day that sounded like the 4th of July, it was not surprising. We got the generator moved, that was a feat as it was tight quarters for the tractor with very little room for error. It took a bit but we got it patched into the soloar unit. We didn’t get the 2-wire auto start set up we have time. We were able to test it through and the inverter chargers work well. We also got a refrigerator for the cabin.

And we’re up to January. Between Black Belt and Christmas, not much was accomplished at the farm. We got the oak planed out for the window trim. The big windows are now wrapped in red oak and we built a sheft to start reducing clutter in the cabin. Finished install on the wood stove, works great! We have built a kitchen counter from some of the wild cherry slabs and planks. Also refilled the kindling bin.

That pretty much catches us up. I know I need to be better at updates but life is busy.

Another Red Oak

We have lucked into an enormous red oak when some good friends needed one removed from their property. It was dead and had a hollow spot near the base of the trunk. This made it a dangerous felling as we had no idea how far up the hollow went. But we’ve had a bit of experience with felling trees so we decided to help them out.

We secured a strap around the trunk about half way up so we could encourage it to fall in the direction of our choice so as not to damage any power lines or buildings. The strap was attached to a snatch block then secured to the back end of the 1 ton pick-up, again, so we could direct the way it fell.

After the initial cut, it got hung on the tree next to it.

Sycle cut a nice wedge and I put tension on the line, he then began the final cuts. It got hung in the branches of the tree next to it and started to twist, making it very unpredictable and dangerous. That also made the wedge ineffective and it was sitting on the stump, completely detatched from the trunk. The truck was proving to not “have enough ass” to pull this tree down so we let out the 12K lb wench and secured it to another tree in front of the truck. We had the 1 ton truck, assisted by a 12K lb wench and it still wasn’t enough to pull this tree down. Time to bring in the tractor. After very carefully securing a chain around the lower part of the tree, above the cut, it was attached to the front of the tractor. Finally she started to come down, taking out a locust tree with her. It was very scary and kind of awe inspiring at the same time.

TIMBER

All that was left was the clean-up. We managed to get four good 8ish foot logs out of the straight part of the trunk. It was all the tractor could take to get them loaded and they about overloaded the trailer. These logs will be milled down for doors adn floors in the cabin.

The experience hauling these logs the 148 miles on a trailer that was just a little too small accelerated the timeline on replacing it was something a little bigger.

20+5, gooseneck with 2 -10K dual axels. We can haul just about anything now.

Sycle took the second week of May and stayed at the farm to work on the cabin and catch up with some chores. He mounted the big windows on the sides of the cabin, finished out the last trim pieces on the roof, cleaned up the cut offs from the saw mill, and installed the cedar on the ceiling of the front porch.

We went from this…
to THIS!

Piece by piece, we are getting closer to being able to inhabit the cabin. It will be nice to have a dry, comfortable place to stay on hunting trips, and during construction of the “big house”. We have already begun sourcing trees and logs to start milling the lumber. Looking for locust trees as they are nature’s pressure treated and will not rot when in contact with the ground.

Oh, and I checked on the spring last time I was there, it’s still flowing nicely and the dam is looking good.

A New Truck

He named her Liberty

The old Tundra has served us well for 20 years. We used her and abused her a bit along the way and it was time for her to retire. One of the reasons for getting a new truck is sycle has this idea for generating some retirement income milling extra long, large logs. Large logs necessitated a larger truck. Ladies and gentlemen, meet Liberty! A 2022 Ford F-350 super duty, 6.7L power stroke diesel turbo with extended cab, full-size bed, goose neck compatible, dually. Just about everywhere they go, someone makes a comment or asks sycle quesitons about her. I know he bought the right truck because everytime he parks her, he has to turn around and look at her one more time before walking away.

We’re making slow progress at the farm, but progress none the less. We have treated the logs with a solution that will prohibit mold and kill log rot fungus. It will also deter insects as well. It’s amazing the difference it made in the appearence of the logs. And when you don’t have running water, you have to tap into some of that red-neck enginerring and use a 150 tub and pump to feed the power washer.

After a week of drying, the logs look so much brighter and clean. Oh, and we had a late spring snow.

You can see the difference in the color of the logs?

And just like that… spring has sprung.

Lots to do yet to get ready to make this place our full time home, but it already feels like home to me.

Under Roof

It seems to have taken a long time to get to this point, but now things are moving a little more quickly. All the heavy lifting, all the measuring twice and cutting once, all the literal blood, sweat, and tears we have put into this venture so far have brought us to the point of the cabin actually having a roof. To be fair, it’s plywood sheeting and roofing paper, but it’s ready for the metal. And we’re not “dryed in” because we still don’t have windows or doors, but those will come.

First you have to build the structural supports, a ridge post, rafters, and a king joist.

Next comes the plywood, many sheets of plywood. Most of them are full sheets but some need to be cut to various sized to cover everything. Then the roofing paper goes down to protect the wood from the weather. We haven’t gotten the metal sheeting yet, it’s expensive for one thing, and timing, we weren’t ready for it until now.

I took a couple other pictures around the farm because it’s just so pretty. The weather was cool in the morning and warm during the day, a perfect preview for fall.

By the way, I think that misty picture is the best I’ve ever taken. That’s it for now. Have I mentioned I love the life we’re building?

22 Foot Timbers

Sycle went to the farm the Wednesday before Labor Day, I had planned on joining him on Friday, but my sinuses had a different agenda. He spent two days working the saw mill, trimmed 10 timbers to work with and finished cutting a piece of oak that was on the saw. He cut the 4 – 22 foot logs and not only got the 4 – 22 foot timbers needed but also a great amount of other dimentional timber, including a 2.25″x 12.25″x 22′ piece for the center ridgepole for the roof of the cabin.

When working off the grid, sometimes you have to get creative. Most people will say they are just working with what they have, we like to call it “redneck engineering”. For example, sycle constructed a makeshift “jib” for the front of the tractor to assist in lifting and placing timbers. And did you know a clamp could double as a timber wrench?

Some of the trees that were felled on our property were red oak and wild cherry, and we were gifted some white oak and walnut. All of those hardwoods have been planked out to 5 quarters and will make beautiful mosiac hardwood flooring. We’ve got it in the water barn drying. I know sounds like an oxymoron, drying in the water barn… but that is the dryest place on the farm at the moment. It is where we have a 1500 gallon storage tank for water from the spring.

This weekend there were some scary moments when the tractor forks were as high as they could go and a 22 foot 7×7 timber is perched on them. Moving that much weight, overhead, in tight spaces, is very dangerous work. But the craftsmanship that sycle puts into each cut, making the joints fit, creating cutouts and making everything fit is equally as awe inspiring to me.

We did place 6 timbers on Saturday, the cabin is really tighenting up with the double windows and long beams set. Well, the windows aren’t in yet but the openings are framed. We decideed we need to go up 1 more row to get rafters up over 8 feet. We’ll work on that next weekend. Hopefully the next post will be that the ridgebeam and rafters are up! We really wanted to be under roof before deer season this year, not quite there.

One thing I was able to work on was filling the woodshed for this winter. I split and stacked the cutoffs from the sawmill. It’s not enough to get throught the entire winter but it’s a good start.

I am so excited about the progress we are making on our little farmstead.