Thursday, December 30, 2021

Escape from the Cabin - An Alberta Staycation

 

As you may know if you’ve read my blog post “Escape to the Cabin” Rose and I are fortunate enough to have a place out in the country to escape the city during covid. Over the last two summers we have spent a lot of time exploring the little towns and attractions around the area near Bashaw Alberta. This post is about the roving we’ve done and some of the local gems we’ve discovered.


We love our little 10 acres of paradise but there’s only so much reading and relaxing and tinkering you can do so we’ve started to develop a routine. When we get out there on Wednesday or Thursday afternoon, we settle in and plan our “Escape FROM the Cabin” for Friday. Sometimes it’s just our local little town of Bashaw but usually it’s a little farther afield.
Bashaw is just a 10 minute drive and we’ve been there many, many times over the years and we try to shop there as much as possible to support the local businesses.

Bashaw Rodeo Chuckwagon Races



The Bashaw Museum

The Bashaw Canada Day Parade


It’s a little strange in a town of 830 people to have 2 liquor stores and 2 grocery stores and at least 4 restaurants but that’s what Bashaw boasts. There’s also a butcher shop, a hardware store, a building supply store, a drug store, a gas station and many other small businesses.

This is not the city though! You better watch the posted hours if you want the store to be open and even then, with one restaurant in particular, it’s still a crap shoot. I get it though, for a small family run business it’s important to draw a line and declare that family comes first. We love this one restaurant called “The Noble Fox” (weird name for a Mexican Restaurant) and we often take our visitors there for some great food (when it’s open).

Delicious burger at the Noble Fox

Steak Carnitas at the Noble Fox


On one memorable occasion Rose and I attended a dance at the Majestic Theatre in Bashaw and had a great time sitting and chatting with some locals between dances. Before covid came along we enjoyed the Bashaw Rodeo and chuck wagon races on one nice August afternoon and hopefully we’ll get another chance to do it again.

Bashaw Rodeo Mini Chuckwagon Races



Bashaw is so close though and we’re there so often that it’s not really a special outing for us anymore, more of a quick trip to the store for something we need. These days when we want to enjoy a special day in the country we are likely to venture into the bustling town of Lacombe. 


It’s a little weird to be saying this because I’m sure that Lacombe has lots more to offer, but for us the biggest draws are a thrift store and the best darn donuts I’ve ever eaten at a place called Toller’s Bistro. I may not know much, but I know a great donut when I bite into one and yowza, these donuts are da bomb!

The Worlds Best Donut!


Before I tried their donuts the best donut like thing that I ever tasted was probably the cronuts we tried in Montreal in 2017, but now there’s a new champ! Rose likes the lemon poppy seed donuts but I’m a chocolate man and their Skor flavoured donuts are my favourite for sure.


I’m kind of glad that for us the cabin is a three season affair and from November until April I can wean myself off of these amazing pastries of fluffy, sugary, bliss.


This past year as we contemplated closing up the cabin, we determined that it was absolutely necessary to make a last stop in Lacombe to pick up a dozen donuts to freeze and ration out over the long cold winter. Only this (or something tasty like it) makes it possible to survive an Alberta winter!


Of course there are a couple of other things that we love about Lacombe, they have a really big farmers market on Fridays with food trucks and baked goods and all sorts of yummies. Plus they have at least one really good restaurant called the Cilantro & Chive, yum!


We also love the thrift store because they have a lot of DVDs for sale and they only cost $.50 each! It feels like such a bargain (start the car!) toting 15 0r 20 DVDs back to the cabin along with a bunch of kids books for Junie and paying only $10 or so.


We both love a bargain and with no TV at the cabin we always need a fresh supply of viewing and reading material. We took some friends and our adult kids to Lacombe on a couple of occasions last summer and I don’t think they appreciated the thrift store as much as we did, although when we took them for donuts they sure perked up!


Not far from Lacombe is the Ellis Bird Farm and at least a couple of times a year we like to go there and wander around through the flower gardens, woods and trails watching the hundreds of birds that nest there. This past summer we took Junie and Kait for the first time and had lots of fun down at the pond trying to grab up some pond life in the nets they provided. Next year when she’s three, she’ll be able to do more activities and we can’t wait to take her back.

My Ellis Bird Farm Pond Photo-393,000 views on Google Maps!

Kait & Junie trying to catch a pollywog



In our travels we kept seeing a sign for the town of Stettler and since it was only about 40 minutes away from the cabin we figured we’d give it a try one Friday afternoon. Sorry Stettler, but we gave it a shot and your thrift store was closed “because of covid” and the only donut shop besides Tim Hortons that we could find totally sucked! I don’t doubt that there is more to recommend the town but for us it was a bust except for the cool old sign shown below.

Cool old sign in Stettler


On the other hand we loved the much smaller town of Alix where my grandparents had a house when I was growing up. It was fun to drive around the town and search for the old house and it was even more fun when we found it! I have many fond memories from my childhood of spending time there with my Dad’s mom & dad, Cecil & Lois Petry.
My grandfather Cecil worked at the local “creamery” in Alix until he retired and eventually passed away sometime around 1975.

The house had one of those attics with the little "secret passage" running beside the eaves and us kids loved to creep from one bedroom to the other, trying not to fall through the weird, vermiculite insulation. Such fun with the cousins munching grandma's home made cake donuts (I'm sensing a theme here) and playing in the attic bedrooms.


The town is unrecognizable now but lakes don’t move (much) and their house was adjacent to the North side of the Alix lake and that made it a lot easier to find. We discovered that today Alix has a great little antique store and lots of other shops and a few restaurants that we will have to try out the next time we are there.


Another fun little place that we like to go is “Gracie D’s” antiques and collectibles in the tiny little town of Mirror. This store almost seems to be bigger than the whole rest of the town combined! There are 15-20 small buildings in an enclosed yard and one main building and everything is just stuffed full of, well, stuff.


Much, much stuff. There’s Big stuff, small stuff, old stuff, very old stuff and shiny or rusty stuff. Lots of happy rummaging material here!

Gracie D's yard decorated with old truck & Flowers

Old Volkswagen Beetle at Gracie D's 


There’s one other town nearby that we often spend time in and that’s Camrose, a 30 minute drive from the cabin. We came so close to moving to Camrose a few years ago and Rose made me drive there to look at houses many, many times that summer. But along came our granddaughter Junie and that was, as they say, that.


The shopping and restaurants in Camrose are great and there isn’t much that you can’t get there, we love Mirror Lake and the path that goes all the way around it and we like to stop for an ice cream cone and then take a nice walk around the lake.


We’ve really missed the “Jaywalkers Jamboree” that takes place during June in Camrose. It’s basically a small town version of whatever they’re now calling Edmonton’s Klondike Days/Edmonton Exhibition/K Days, but with free parking and no entrance charge because it takes place right on the downtown streets.

Fun on the Carousel - Jaywalkers Jamboree

Games & Prizes



We find that there is always something to see in Alberta’s small towns and we really enjoy wandering around checking them out when we’re a little bored and trying to “Escape from the Cabin”. Christmas is now over and the days are starting to get longer, oh so slowly, so it won’t be long until we’re again anxiously anticipating spring once again. We just have to get through January and February and March, nothing to it!


Thursday, December 9, 2021

Renos with Rosie - The Kitchen Contention - Part 1

 

I protested vehemently and I argued eloquently. 
I even resorted to raising my voice and stomping my foot in protest. But in the end, somehow, through some kind of feminine wiles that I fail to understand, I agreed to renovate the kitchen.

Not that it didn't need it because oh boy, it realllllly needed it!

My argument was more along the lines of, "with the state of the world right now extra money might be better spent on a root/bomb cellar or any number of prepper supplies like maybe respirators or batteries and I don't know, copious amounts of toilet paper!"

When that didn't work I mentioned that I had spent the entire previous winter doing minor renovations of one sort or another and "I am just really exhausted! I'm supposed to be retired!" And finally, the real kicker argument, "I don't wanna!"

But as usual I was eventually overruled and after a lot of Pinterest consultations and discussion between Rose, our adult daughters, April, Kait and myself; our design began to take shape and plans were made.

Little did I know that Rose’s plans and what I thought were our plans did not jive at all! We were supposed to go to BC to visit her ailing father and other family and friends and as cabin season was coming to an end we were really busy there and in our own yard and there was definitely no time to begin renovations.
 
So of course that’s exactly what Rose proposed that we do, she wanted me to build a paint booth in the back yard and begin painting all of the kitchen cabinets before winter!

My usual knee-jerk (or just jerk if you prefer) reaction is to say “NO, it can’t be done! It’s impossible!” And of course that’s what happened, exactly as my clever wife had planned. Perhaps she knows me too well, or I don’t know her well enough because I fell for it again.

Once she had elicited my expected reaction to her outrageous painting proposal, she quickly backed away from the ruse and deftly slipped in a new more reasonable idea that I found infinitely more doable, and so begins our kitchen renovation story.

If you've ever done much in the way of renovating you understand the domino effect that determines the order in which you can proceed. For us it is the extreme lack of storage space that we had to factor into our plans as we thought about the order that things had to be done.

This is where we are going




This is where we started

We decided that step one was to remove our tiny pantry cabinet in the kitchen and replace it with two Ikea "Pax" wardrobe cabinets that we could stuff full of all of the displaced kitchen items that we would end up with when we pulled down one of our upper cabinets and did away with all of the countertop clutter.
These Pax things are huge and when you install 3 drawers and 4 shelves inside each one they are amazingly spacious and practical as a kitchen pantry.

One issue with them for us is the very weak shelves that are only supported on the sides and not the back. But with my amazing MacGyver skills I designed a hack that should make these shelves able to survive unbowed for years. I cut 2x2 pieces to fit under the shelves along the back, painted them white and put screws into them through the sides of the pantry. Mic drop!


Supports for the Pax Pantry shelves



Ikea "Pax" Pantry



Right now getting some products at Ikea is a challenge and it took over a month to get the shelves in and I ended up cutting down a full sized shelf to make a microwave shelf above our "coffee bar".

 

The coffee bar is our favourite part of the pantry setup right now with the little led strip mounted on the underside of the shelf above it illuminating the coffee area nicely. For once, everything related to coffee and tea is located together in one place! We love it.

The Coffee Bar


While we waited for the Ikea shelves to arrive we started on the countertops and removing one of the upper cabinets beside the window so we could tile the entire wall and install floating shelves.

We decided on rubber wood, butcher block countertops from Lowes and we picked up 3 of them on sale for $129 each. As I wheeled them out I was tempted to yell “start the car” like the Ikea commercial. Next I got started ripping out the old counters so we could get it all done while the weather held. Since I have no garage, I do most of my cutting outside and we were in a race against the winter snows.


Ripping out the old counter

The new counter installed


The weird hole I had to make for the sink

The countertops cut fairly easily and since we were butting them up against each other and not trying to do 45 degree angles or anything it went very quickly. The biggest job was cutting out the hole and fitting the used white cast iron sink that Rose had found at the Re-Store. 

After insisting that we store that old sink in the basement for at least 7 years, she finally found a use for the thing. It is a weird size that just barely fit into the existing sink base unit but now it looks great! 

Rose's salvage sink $30


As I got the counters all in and fastened down I was standing around admiring how great they looked and thinking, "there, that's done, on to the next step." Of course that's  when my lovely wife dropped the bombshell that she now wanted to get rid of the lazy Susan unit in the corner cabinet and replace it with some slide out pot racks.

I may have reacted shall we say "strongly",  since I had mentioned it earlier when the counters were off and was assured that no, we weren’t going to be ripping it out. “Are you sure dear?”  I asked, “because now would be the time to do it while the counters are off.”

But "nooooooo" I was told, until I was all finished installing the counters and then it magically changed to "YES", I should have known! 

As it turned out it wasn’t too difficult to take out with a little help from my favourite power tool, my sawzall, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, that thing is amazing at demolishing stuff. 



Removing the Lazy Susan

The biggest problem was that once I cut a hole in the side of the cabinet and Junie our granddaughter learned she could climb inside and make a fort in there, I was lucky to get it done without breaking her little heart. She’s getting used to renovations though and seems to just roll with it, enjoying each phase of the process.

Junie in her temporary "fort"

Speaking of Junie, one day after we looked after her during the renovation and she was “helping me” all day she went home and was busy moving stuff around and when her mom asked her what she was doing her response was. “I'm the papa, making everything nice". She was apparently, “remodelling.” What a sweetie!

The pot rack drawers turned out great and after I was finished I noticed that there was about 6 extra inches of clearance so I made a nice little spice drawer as well. I’m particularly proud of the drawer as I made it for about $10 and it works great.



The new spice drawer

And the pot racks

Next we removed one of the upper cabinets, April helped me replace the kitchen window, (she now loves the Sawzall almost as much as I do) and we completely tiled the wall around the window right to the ceiling. 

Next I installed 2 floating shelves that I made myself from the same rubberwood countertops that I used for the counters and if that wasn’t enough, I boxed in the extra space above the cabinet so it goes right to the ceiling now.


April helps me tile the backsplash




It's coming along-holes are for the floating shelf pins

Rose likes to "inflict" I mean "show me" various blogs with ideas for doing some similar renos and sometimes they are even helpful. One of them was about installing floating shelves and since they seemed workable, I shamelessly used their ideas- with a little tweaking of course. 

Getting ready for the floating shelves

I drilled holes in the studs about 3 inches deep and threaded 5/8th rods into the holes and then drilled slightly larger, matching holes into the shelves and pushed the shelves on and just like that, floating shelves. Actually that all involved about 6 hours of work and cost more than commercially available shelves but hey, it’s “custom”. 

The partly finished kitchen

All that’s left to do on that wall is a little more tile, a crown molding along the top of the cabinets at the ceiling and to paint all of the kitchen cabinets. In part 2 of this little renovation blog we will be doing all of that plus building a new custom hood vent. That should be fun! Not!

So far it’s been going great and we both love the renos that we’ve completed. We are taking a much deserved Christmas break and then we get back at it in January. We’ve got a little bit of time before cabin season starts again in April and this year I’m determined not to miss a minute of it so this renovation has got to be done before then!





Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Renos with Rosie - Escape to the Cabin

 

Some of us are lucky to have a special place, a refuge from the busy-ness of our daily lives and for me; it’s “the Cabin”. Thirteen years ago, in 2008, we built a “Knotty Pine Cabin” on our little 10 acre parcel of land in Central Alberta.


It's on a little bit of lake surrounded by wetlands teeming with waterfoul. Buying it was a risk for us at the time but we are very, very glad that we took the leap.

Geese taking off from the lake

Early morning from the deck


Like so many of the “leaps” that I’ve taken over the years, it seemed more like I was dragged to the decision and actions that followed by my always thinking wife, Rose. As a matter of fact, I had recently quit my job and was in Ft. Mcmurray doing a small project for my former employer. Rose called me there to say that her friend had let her know about a small parcel of land right next door to his place that had recently gone up for sale.


She wanted to go see it and, since I was away for a few days, it was decided that she would drive out and have a look and see if it was something we would be interested in. Well, after that it was like a whirlwind swept through our lives! Rose loved it and wanted to buy it right then and there.


It was completely undeveloped and apparently there was an astonishing amount of interest in it. Our friend told her there was lots of traffic along the road, with people tramping around looking over the property and she was bound and determined to snatch it up before someone else beat us to it.


Since we had the money available and I completely trusted her to make a good decision regarding the purchase, she called up a realtor and made an offer to purchase that same day and, to our everlasting relief, it was quickly accepted. According to the realtor our buy was definitely "the bargain of the summer". Realtors as we know often resort to hyperbole, but he was right!


Shazaaam, Rose heard, she saw, and then she acted decisively as she is prone to do and when I returned from Fort Mcmurray we took our two teenaged daughters and went to have a look at our new property.
We all loved it and we tromped around through the woods trying to imagine exactly how we could develop and use it. We eventually ended up scrambling up the hillside and standing on a fallen log together looking out through a natural gap in the forest at the beautiful little lake as Rose declared with certainty, “this is where we will build our cabin!”

Me, standing where the cabin will be built

Rose looking happy, thinking about building the cabin



If you know Rose, you will not be surprised to learn that we did indeed build our cabin on that exact spot the next summer.


Me being me, I was thinking a small, cozy (cheap) cabin and Rose being who she is, we ended up going considerably bigger than I thought we needed to and spent way more money than I thought we could afford.


As usual, after considerable convincing, I decided that I had been right all along and we went with Roses more expensive choice of a 12’ x 24’ “Knotty Pine Cabin” and we are now very glad that we did!


It turns out that even a 12x24 cabin quickly seems to shrink when you build a bedroom and a bathroom and a kitchen and add some furniture etc. We added an 8’x12’ loft with a ladder and a 12’x 8’ deck with railing and we were all set. Now to decide where exactly to build it and to clear a road and all the rest of it.


I was away a lot and Rose handled the clearing of the road and the building spot after my good friend Ron and I trudged through the woods marking out the exact route that our access road would take. We made it with a nice curve and a small hill that blocks all view of the cabin from the road.


Once that was marked, we hired a local guy to clear the land and with Roses direction, he did a stellar job. He used something called a brush hog mounted on the front of a skid steer. That noisy thing chews up the brush and throws it everywhere leaving the ground covered with small sticks and shredded wood that eventually goes back into the soil.


Next, we marked out exactly where the cabin was going to be built and where we wanted the outhouse and shed that we had purchased from the neighbor. Rose once again ran the show, directing the delivery of 15 loads of gravel plus the levelling of the road, yard and cabin building site while I played hooky working in Ft. Mcmurray.

Site cleared, now for the gravel

Right here is where the deck will be


I was very happy when I got out there once again as she had done a fantastic job and the shed was already in place. There wasn’t much to do to level out the building site before it was time to assemble the skids and the cabin base on site.


It was around this time that we began to wonder if we needed a building permit and after contacting the county, we discovered that sure enough we did need to get a permit. “How else are we going to tax you the exorbitant (I mean appropriate) amount?”


Well that was a whole crazy adventure that Rose handled in my absence, and she actually had to go down to a council meeting and plead the case for building a “temporary building” on our 10 acres of land beside the lake.


They deigned to grant us a building permit and with our little piece of paper clutched in our sweaty palms, we were ready to accept delivery and begin assembling our cabin.


We opted to build the cabin base ourselves to save money and we were fortunate to be able to hire a friend to help me build the base and assemble the cabin. We closely followed the directions and built a 12x24’ insulated base. When the cabin was delivered, we got to work on the cabin build. During this time we stayed next door in our friend’s guest cabin that he had built to stay in while he constructed his own house a few years prior.

Building the insulated base

Getting the roof on-the lightest guy (me) gets to stand on the roof


My helper and I worked well together and over the course of a few days we got the cabin walls up and a tarp over it until we could get back out and assemble the roof. I hired a few different young guys and tapped some friends to assist over the next couple of weeks and we got the roof panels on and insulated and then the metal roofing. With some finishing touches we had a bare bones cabin shell and couldn’t wait to sleep in it!

Getting the windows in and the gable ends on

Looking towards the lake

Now for the metal roof and insulation

And it's done - on the outside


I probably would have stopped there for a while but Rose had other ideas. First we needed a bedroom and a bathroom and I have to admit that they have since come in handy! We built an 8’x8’ bedroom and stuffed it kind of full with a queen bed and two end tables. There’s just enough room to walk around it but what more do you need?


The bathroom is 4’x8’ and is jam packed with a small sink fed from a 10 litre jug, a nice little camping toilet, some shelves and an old buffet/sideboard that belonged to my mom and is now used for storage.

The bathroom

The camp kitchen that we used for the first few years

Rose getting organized, while April takes a well earned break

Our 8x8 bedroom


The shower is outside and it’s one of my favourite things about the cabin. After cutting the grass or picking berries or just to cool off, there are few things better than an outdoor shower! It started as a jug in a black bag (to absorb heat) mounted on a tree and gradually morphed into a wood deck with a fence around three sides and a barrel of water pumped through a propane heater for a piping hot outdoor shower experience!

The outdoor shower



Every year we made improvements, like some water barrels and eves trough to capture rain water for the shower and a propane furnace to heat the cabin. We’ve got a few solar panels charging up some power boxes that give us enough AC power to run a TV/DVD player and light bulbs and a lovely, beautiful, super handy generator with a remote start, a wonderful invention indeed! In the kitchen we use a 12 volt water pump combined with a propane heater, to give us nice hot water for washing dishes.


Rose has always been a real trooper when it comes to making due with what is available and for the first few years at the cabin she turned out some amazing meals on a one burner, pop up camp kitchen with a tiny little flexible vinyl sink and almost no prep area. I don’t know how she did it for so long but eventually we decided it was time to upgrade to a real kitchen.


The kitchen itself was probably the most life changing (and costly) of our many improvements. We went with Ikea butcher block counter tops mounted on some modular kitchen cabinets and a 2 drawer industrial filing cabinet that Rose scrounged from one of her jobs. It worked the way it usually does in our household. Rose has the vision, prods me into going along with it, and then somehow or other, I make it happen. My approach to building and renovating is a combination of MacGyver and Mike Holmes and somehow it usually works out pretty well.

New kitchen and lighting fixture


In this case it turned out to be very functional and rustically attractive kitchen with a three burner propane cooktop, a nice new sink and taps and a place to hang her favourite cast iron pans. Rose is all about cast iron, she loves the look of it and she can make just about anything you may want in a cast iron pan of some size. She's got four of them hanging at the cabin and another eight on her wall at home!


We installed a custom light fixture that I made from an antique piece of wood from an old buggy harness/oxen yoke/centaur saddle (what the heck do I know) a cool piece of wood with metal rings and hooks on it.

We added a cat ramp up to the loft so our kitty doesn’t have to use the ladder. We also cleared (by hand) a lot more area on both sides of the cabin to give us a larger parking area and a place for the trailer and other things. This gives us some expansion space with a water view for use when visitors want to park a trailer or pitch a tent.

Zoey's cat ramp


This year we added a lean-to style screened room with sliding roof panels to the front of the cabin and we love it! The big hit of the summer though (with our granddaughter Junie) is the 12’x12’ tent platform that we built on our secondary viewing spot. She loves to drag some unsuspecting adult over there to play games or read to her. Since she discovered the tent, we haven’t been able to interest her in the canoe, go figure!

The new "Glamping" tent platform
Dancing with Junie before we set up the tent




The new (old) deck furniture


Two and a half year old Junie, loves the cabin. Whether it is picking berries, hiking the trails, playing with the “blocks” that are nothing more then left over triangular bits of wood, canoeing or playing in the tent, she is always eager to go to the cabin and sleep in her room there. Her “room” is just the bathroom with a playpen set up in it but she doesn’t mind and until she is old enough to sleep in the loft, it seems to do fine.


We’re happy to have the cabin as a family retreat from the busyness of life in the city but what makes it extra special are the times when family and friends visit and we get to share the experience with them.


This morning I'm floating in my canoe at the far end of the lake enjoying the sounds of the birds along the shore. The red winged black birds are chirping, clacking and trilling among the reeds as I sit here floating on a perfectly calm lake. All at once the American Coots nesting on shore begin a series of barking/coughing alarm calls that signal I've drifted too close to their nesting site and I back paddle, gently moving away.

Writing in the canoe


I've brought my coffee today and there are few things more pleasant than sipping good coffee in a canoe on a flat, private lake on a sunny morning in the summer time.


Rose sends me a text as I sit here writing. "This morning Junie said,” "I like Papa, give him a hug." Somehow my day just got a little bit better!


It's not all relaxing and floating around on the lake, there is a lot of work involved but somehow I don't mind it. We have this place because of the work, it's as comfortable as it is because of the work, so even the work part is satisfying in a different way than it is in the city.

Over the years I’ve built up a two kilometer trail system that takes you through a whole selection of different elevations and micro climates. There’s the upper meadow that meanders through raspberry, Saskatoon, chokecherry and gooseberry/black current patches and past the spot where the deer like to bed down. Then down through the forest past the spot where the Long Eared owls nested for a few years (they are still around but nesting across the road now).

Next the trail goes through the driest area on the property, the “lower meadow” and around the point and onto the shady path that runs along the lake for half a kilometer. It goes past the dock that started out life as a picnic table and then past “April’s spot” that we cleared out and now have a wood bench swing set up where you can swing in the sun and look at the lake.

I love to walk the trails, watching for the family of grouse that nests on the property every year. There are also many water birds of course, but my favourites are probably the Great Blue Herons, they are so huge! We’ve seen deer, moose, coyotes, weasels, bunnies, squirrels, porcupines, hummingbirds, tiger salamanders, garter snakes and myriad other little creatures and birds.

 



Looking up at the new tent area
Early morning



Amazing colour some years

April and I in the canoe
Long eared owlets 


The cabin from across the lake

Looking up at the cabin from the canoe


It’s great to have a little bit of land, our little private fief that we share with the animals and birds and where we do what we want and the world leaves us alone, as long as we pay our taxes to the county that is.
Kait, Junie and I in the canoe


Of course hunting season is sometimes a concern, no-one wants to be sitting on their deck and suddenly hearing gunshots that seem very close by. Those incidents thankfully are few and far between now, due in large part to the many signs I've got posted all over the place.


It's breezy now at midday and I'm glad I took out the canoe early this morning. Even with the little electric motor that we have mounted on the canoe, it can be difficult to return against the wind from the far side of the lake.


Rose and I had quite the adventure a few weeks ago when a sudden strong wind came roaring across the lake sounding like a helicopter overhead! It immediately ripped my hat off and forced us into the reeds along the shore. I tried to turn us into the wind but I had absolutely no control even at full power. Perhaps this is a metaphor for life in general? Control is an illusion and things can change in an instant, so take nothing for granted!

 

Now I know what they are talking about when sailors say you don't want to be trapped against "a lee shore". Feeling powerless is not fun. We waited it out for a few minutes and were able to paddle away from the shore and motor down the lake into the wind but boy we were glad for that little motor!

 

A few days later we were out on the canoe again when I spotted the head of a deer sticking out of the water as it swam (waded?) across the lake. We made our way closer in time to watch the young buck scramble out of the water and go bounding away up the hillside.

 

Life is full of questions sometimes: why did the deer want to cross the lake? And if it had a good reason, why didn’t it just walk around? The lake is about 50 acres in size so it’s easy to walk around it. We figure he just wanted to be in the water, maybe to cool off, who knows?

 

Out here at the cabin these are the most pressing questions once we’ve unplugged from the concerns of the city and the world. Why did the deer swim the lake? Why did the owls move their nest? Why did most of the birch trees die off? And the most pressing question of all, why don’t we just do it and move out here for good?!

I’ll give you a hint, her name is Junie💗. For us, being close to family trumps even the cabin!

Junie marching confidently along the trail
Papa (me) hamming it up with Junie while she gets a bath in the sink

Rose and Junie picking berries