Friday, September 30, 2022

September 30 - DIY Homestead - Our Indoor/Outdoor Wood Stove

September 30, 2022

Day 365 of the Adventure

I spent at least a part of the day doing something that doesn't seem to make much sense. Who ever heard of firing up an indoor woodstove in the outdoors? But YES...... That's exactly what I did. Early this morning as a matter of fact. By now, 6:30 pm, I've come to the conclusion that my efforts have been a success. Going back to the early 80's, I've installed a number of wood stoves in various houses we've lived in. Most of them new, (the stoves that is) The one thing they all had in common other than burning wood, was that the smell of the burning/curing paint on them would stink up the house for days if the first fire happened after the stove was installed in the house. This time, I vowed to haul the whole thing outside and fire it up for a day to keep all the noxious fumes and odors outside. Now, at 6:30pm, I can declare the process a success. At 61 years old (or young, depending on how you view it) I can honestly say I learned something new. 

Tomorrow, I plan to return the stove to the cabin and prepare to install it there. I can already tell that it's going to be perfect at its job. Even outside in the cool of the early morning and now the cool of the early evening, it is radiating its warmth out to our lawn chairs. Taking the chill out of the air and adding a quiet ambiance to our evening. Wood stoves and cabins go together naturally, and I can already tell that the first snowy evening we experience in the backwoods with a glowing fire in the corner of the cabin will be special. 

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Wherever you camp in the world, your fire will be one of the things that sticks in your memory the most!”
― Mehmet Murat ildan

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Woods (Guatemala)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 29 - DIY Homestead -

September 29, 2022

Day 363 of the Adventure

Once again, I feel I need to address the whole idea about rising costs and inflation. In economics, the definition of inflation is "a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy. When the general price level rises, each unit of currency buys fewer goods and services; consequently, inflation corresponds to a reduction in the purchasing power of money". This past year, the increase in the cost of goods has been staggering. A little increase in the cost of food is tolerable, as is a little increase in energy, A little increase in fuel is aggravating. Increases in rent are to be expected I suppose. BUT...... when all of these "little" (or big) increases are combined, it can become suffocating. 

The reason I bring this up today is a short story of someone I know who is about to be crushed under the weight of inflation. She is an elderly woman on a fixed income. Her rent has not been increased for over seven years. In fact, it's the same as when she moved into her home. Being on a fixed income, there's only so much to go around when it comes to paying bills. As the cost of everything in her world has gone up, she has suddenly become unable to pay her rent. Unfortunately, to compound the problem, moving from a modest three bedroom house to a small efficiency apartment would not even save her anything due to the steady rising in rental costs. The small units are as expensive as her larger one at this point. That's if she could even find an available unit. Inflation is about to claim her as another victim of the slow creep in the costs of everything. 

Is there an answer? Probably nothing that will stop inflation, but I believe that a return to more of a self-sufficient life is a remedy to lower the effects of inflation on our lives. I could only guess whether inflation will increase or decrease over the next year or two. I can almost certainly say that no matter what it does, life will not get significantly easier unless we as individuals begin to take some control over how badly the economy affects us. Learning and adopting self-sufficiency lifestyles will be a large part of that solution.

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “Being frugal doesn’t mean slashing your spending or depriving yourself of things that you enjoy. It means knowing the value of a dollar and making every effort to spend it wisely.”
― Frank Sonnenberg

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Dark (Colombia Dark Roast)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 28 - DIY Homestead - Nearly Forgotten Mountain Crafts

September 28, 2022

Day 362 of the Adventure

Today was spent collecting more video footage of Mountain Crafts in action. We've been creating a library of these videos which demonstrate useful, and sometimes nearly forgotten skills around the homestead. Earlier in our quest, we added blacksmithing and cornmeal grinding. Today we added a cooper making wooden buckets. A Weaver making woven rugs on a loom. Soap-making, some wood carving, pottery and candy making. Part of our purpose is to briefly demonstrate the craft but also show that these skills can be used for income or barter as well. 

Personally, I enjoy watching the craftsmanship of these historic skills and trades. I suppose many of them have truly become obsolete. Still, they speak to the ingenuity of the past. For example, I'm not sure of the necessity of wooden buckets any more, but how awesome is it to see all of the patience and precision that goes into the crafting of a wooden bucket. Who knows, there may come a time again when costs or supply chain problems may make getting a modern bucket impossible. I guess then we'll know how important it is to have someone in our circle that can craft us a wooden bucket.

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “We don't value craftsmanship anymore! All we value is ruthless efficiency, and I say we deny our own humanity that way! Without appreciation for grace and beauty, there's no pleasure in creating things and no pleasure in having them! Our lives are made drearier, rather than richer! How can a person take pride in his work when skill and care are considered luxuries! We're not machines! We have a human need for craftsmanship!” ― Bill Watterson

Base Camp Coffee of the Day:  Lost on the Lake (Colombia/Sumatra blend)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

Tuesday, September 27, 2022

September 27 - DIY Homestead - The DIY Mindset

September 27, 2022

Day 361 of the Adventure

I definitely had to stoke the fire up higher and hotter this morning. The 48 degree start of the day was beyond "Brisk". If you notice the truck and trailer in the background, you are seeing the load of log siding that finally arrived yesterday. The most dramatic transformation at Camp Run-Amuck is about to begin. We will video the process as we start it so you can see how to go about it, if you decide to give it a try sometime.

Over the years, I have had a lot of experience with Do-It-Yourself type projects. Most of them small, but a few of them pretty big. The bigger ones include buying the first little resort property where the initial four cabins were and getting that all built back up. Another would definitely be the building of the treehouse cabins. From a Do-It-Yourself perspective, the raw land, homestead start up I believe has been the most challenging. Not because any single part of it is that difficult. It's just that there are so many things to consider when starting with raw land. 

Close Up of the Log Siding Load
I think one of the most common questions I encounter is, "How do I get started?" It shows up over and over in Homestead and Off-Grid social media groups. I don't think any of it is magic. I think it just takes a solid DIY Mindset. Obviously, severe physical limitations could hinder a DIY approach. Aside from that though, I can't really think of much that should stop a person from considering taking on the challenge of moving onto a homestead type of property. It's just a matter of a willingness to learn as you go and a willingness to try new things. 

Where do you start? The answer to that will be as unique as the individual asking the question. With us, on the raw land project, it started with finding land. With someone else it may be as simple as learning to can and preserve their garden produce. For others, perhaps building a chicken coop or tool shed. Regardless of where you start, a DIY Mindset will help you make that start.

Carry On

Adventure Quote: “Life is a constant adventure in the making, in which you are not only the actor but also the writer and the director.” ― Steven Redhead

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost on the Lake (Colombia/Sumatra blend)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

Monday, September 26, 2022

September 26 - DIY - Retired to a Cabin in the Woods

September 26, 2022

Day 360 of the Adventure

As I made my way out to the fire pit this morning, I heard a fury of crashing through the brush out in the woods. Some of it was noisy squirrels and some was deer I guess I had disturbed. Shelley left for her walk a few minutes later and rousted out a few more deer that sneaked up behind me as I sat by the fire. Backwoods living is that way. There's a decent amount of work on my to-do list today, as always, but a morning fire trumps the to-do list every time. 

The outdoor thermometer this morning declared 52 degrees. The forecast is saying 47 degrees for night-time lows in the next few days. As the days get shorter, the weather gets cooler and the fires become more inviting and comfortable in the early morning crispness, life in the woods has a special tranquility to it. Even the slight bit of ash from the fire drifting down into my coffee speaks of Autumn. I've been saying that this woodsy, cabin building project is our move toward retirement, or slowing down for retirement. I may just have to admit at some point that it is, indeed, retirement. Maybe. I'm still not quite sure I'm that old to be referring to myself as retired. I guess the term "old" is just a frame of mind. The term "retired" has a couple of definitions. The first is, "Having left one's job and ceased to work".  I haven't had a job for a long time and I certainly haven't ceased working. The second definition is, "A place one has gone that is quiet and secluded, not seen or frequented by many people"!.......... THAT'S IT........I HAVE retired! lol I've retired to a cabin in the woods! Now I just need to figure out the "Ceased Working" thing. That may never happen. 

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “What's the point of life unless you live it?”  ― Jessica Glasner

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost up the Creek (Sumatra)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata
September 25 Breakfast - Flat-Iron Omelettes

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

Sunday, September 25, 2022

September 25 - DIY Homestead - Doing vs Dreaming

September 25, 2022

Day 359 of the Adventure

(Make sure to check out the videos below the article and feel free to Subscribe to the channel)

I recently began watching a series of videos called "5 Fires". The premise of it, I believe, is a challenge to get out and engage yourself in nature more. Through that process, there would be a greater sense of freedom, accomplishment, confidence and peace. I can certainly appreciate the emphasis on "Doing" rather than just "Dreaming" about an experience. I believe that it can also apply to moving into a more Self-Sufficient lifestyle. I've often mentioned times when we were a young family when the practice of frugal self-sufficiency made the difference between food on the table or not. Almost all of our life involved living in a town somewhere and not having the ability to spread out on a homestead type of property. Like many, we dreamed of the day we could move onto a piece of land and begin our homestead journey. Our "Homestead" consisted of a back yard garden, a series of rabbit hutches in a lean-to off the back of our tool shed and a wood stove to keep the winter utility bills from eating us alive. Oddly enough, we also purchased a circular sawmill from Foley Bellsaw (some of you may remember those ads) found in the classified ads section in the back of a magazine. We learned to quietly saw lumber in the back yard during hours that wouldn't draw too much attention to ourselves. The early 1980's economy made it hard on a young family to get by without something in our hip pocket to help make ends meet. The garden, rabbits, firewood, woodshop and sawmill all contributed to our effort to gain in self sufficiency.

I believe for those who are experiencing similar challenges today (and who isn't), that a fundamental change of focus could easily make the difference between thriving and simply surviving. Notice I didn't say a radical change of lifestyle, just a fundamental change of focus. A focus on improving self-sufficient abilities and skills within the boundaries of other things that cannot be easily changed. Things like land use ordinances, the dreaded Home Owners Associations and things like the limited size of typical small town or urban back yards. As a beginning family, we felt we had no ability to live a "Homestead Life" on an acreage or farm property, no matter how large or small. Instead, the focus became, how can we accomplish those types of things right where we were. In town, on a small footprint of land, restricted to activities that were "acceptable" to town living. Our gardening activities were normal but went beyond seasonal vegetables to Berry bushes, Asparagus beds, Rhubarb beds in addition to all the typical vegetables. The rabbits were quiet and provided a constant source of meat and garden fertilizer. Our firewood pile was large but neatly kept to not present a nuisance to the neighborhood. I ran the big saw infrequently, mainly just to keep myself supplied with hardwoods for the woodshop. It was portable, but most of the time it was backed in close to the woodshop out of sight and mind of the neighborhood. Our neighborhood strategy consisted of gifting some of our produce, canned goods or jellies and the occasion woodshop project to our neighbors. It worked beautifully for over 15 years and I've never regretted the extra effort we subjected ourselves to in order to take measures forward in self-sufficient living.

All of it worked and worked well. We probably reduced our food bill by a third, our heating bill easily by two thirds and the stress of making ends meet by a lot. I don't even know how to quantify the reduction in the stress factor. The stress of getting by was gradually preplaced with a satisfaction connected to the "Getting By". I even remember the month we installed our wood stove, the gas company sent someone around to make sure our gas meter had not gone bad. Upon discovering that we had installed a wood stove and seeing the monumental pile of firewood we had accumulated, his only response was, "Ah, I see why your meter acts like it quit working!" His exact response was not "Carry On", but it was a "Carry On and have a Great Day" type of response. I believe he recognized that we had taken a step toward self-sufficiency without really speaking those specific words or in those terms. In fact, I got the impression that deep down, he was in approval of it and possibly even in admiration of it. Perhaps even a bit jealous, but that could just be just my imagination.  

How this relates to the "5 Fires" series is "Stop Dreaming and Start Doing". Don't be afraid to begin doing something to move yourself towards your dream no matter your current situation or circumstances. Sit by a fire with pen and notepad in hand. Figure out that dream or that thing that you would do for yourself if you would just simply decide to do it for yourself. Begin to imagine and formulate a plan to step up and find ways to begin doing that dream. Doing adds feet and motion to Dreaming. I've always cited a quote that says, "If your dream is not big enough, any excuse will stop you. If your dream is big enough, nothing will stop you"!

Carry On

Adventure Quote: “You are as young as your faith, as old as your doubt; as young as your self-confidence, as old as your fear; as young as your hope, as old as your despair." ~ Douglas MacArthur

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Highlander Grogg (Buterscotch/Rum flavors)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 24 - DIY Homestead - Camp WIldlife

September 24, 2022

Day 358 of the Adventure

Camp Wildlife is always welcome around here and never gets old. Early this morning I caught some movement out of the corner of my eye just down the hill. It turned out to be three deer passing by on their way from somewhere to somewhere else. I got one quick picture with my phone, but they were gone by the time I could retrieve a video camera with zoom lens. It was early enough that the light level was very low, so the picture is a bit grainy and dark. Nevertheless, deer on the property are always a welcome event. 

It's not the first time we've had deer, they are actually very common. The times when I get excited are times like the Bobcats that got into a growling match just down the hill from the cabin. Or the "OH WOW" birds that venture near early in the mornings. Coyotes tend to be heard at night but never seem to venture close during the day. A fox will stand your hair straight up in the middle of the night with their eerie calls. Our friend Pat insists we have Bigfoot around here although I'm not sure what they sound like. Besides, they seem to much better at Hide and Seek than all the other wildlife around here. I'll be sure to let you know if we ever get a Sasquatch on video. Until then, we'll just have to leave them in the category of "Legend". 

Have I mentioned how much I love living in the backwoods?

Carry On

 Adventure Quote:  “Adventure has the gravitational pull of a black hole. The more you do it, the more you find a way to keep doing it.”
― Josh Gate

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost in the Fog (Guatemala Decaf)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 23 - DIY Homestead

September 23, 2022

Day 357 of the Adventure

With much of the backhoe excavations done, it's time to bring in some of the other tools we've chosen for camp maintenance around here. Two of the tractor attachments that have been waiting patiently to arrive down here is a box blade and a brush hog. One for keeping the roadways leveled and the other to keep the underbrush cleared out in areas we want to be kept open. As you probably know by now, our tractor has been a critical part of the "opening up" of the land here and getting it developed to where it is now. These other implements are part of the next stage of keeping it civilized. Maybe I should say keeping the parts we want to be civilized. I'm still in favor of leaving most of it wild and untamed, just the way it is. Still, parts of it need to be...... civilized. 

As we close in on the one year anniversary of purchasing our "Camp Run-Amuck", I'm actually very satisfied with the progress, even though it feels like we should be further along. Part of that, is me still trying to apply the past intensity levels of resort work onto this property. This is something I still need to get over. My claim was that this was a project we planned as our "slow down" project. It's time to accept the slower pace as good enough. 

Carry On

Adventure Quote:  “When you have lived your individual life in your own adventurous way and then look back upon its course, you will find that you have lived a model human life, after all.”
― Joseph Campbell

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Lost on the Trail (Guatemala)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

September 22 - DIY Homestead - 5 Fires

September 22, 2022

Day 356 of the Adventure 
(Make sure to check out the videos below the article and feel free to Subscribe to the channel)

I began watching a series of videos called "5 Fires". The premise of it, I believe, is a challenge to get out and engage yourself in nature more. In that process, there would be a greater sense of freedom, accomplishment, confidence and peace. I can certainly appreciate the emphasis on "Doing" rather than just "Dreaming" about an experience. I think that also applies to moving into a more Self-Sufficient lifestyle. I've often mentioned times when we were a young family when the practice of frugal self-sufficiency made the difference between food on the table or not. Almost all of our life involved living in a town somewhere and not having the ability to spread out on a homestead type of property. Our "Homestead" consisted of a back yard garden, a series of rabbit hutches in a lean-to off the back of our tool shed and a wood stove to keep the winter utility bills from eating us alive. 

I believe for those who are experiencing similar challenges today (and who isn't), that a fundamental change of focus could easily make the difference between thriving and simply surviving. Notice I didn't say a radical change of lifestyle, just a fundamental change of focus. A focus on improving self-sufficient abilities and skills within the boundaries of other things that cannot be easily changed. As a beginning family, we felt we had no ability to live a "Homestead Life" on an acreage or farm property, no matter how large or small. Instead, the focus became, how can we accomplish those types of things right where we were. In town, on a small footprint of land, restricted to activities that were "acceptable" to town living. 

It worked. We probably reduced our food bill by a third, our heating bill easily by two thirds and the stress of making ends meet by a lot. I don't even know how to quantify the stress factor. I even remember the month we installed our wood stove, the gas company sent someone around to make sure our gas meter had not gone bad. Upon discovering that we had installed a wood stove and seeing the monumental pile of firewood we had accumulated, his only response was, "Ah, I see why your meter acts like it quit working!" His exact response was not "Carry On", but it was a "Carry On and have a Great Day" type of response. I believed he recognized that we had taken a step toward self-sufficiency without really speaking those specific words, and I got the impression that deep down, he was in approval of it. 

How this relates to the "5 Fires" series is "Stop Dreaming and Start Doing". Doing something to move yourself towards your dream. Sit by a fire with pen and notepad in hand. Figure out that dream or that thing that you would do for yourself......if you would just do it for yourself!

Carry On

Adventure Quote: “You are as young as your faith, as old as your doubt; as young as your self-confidence, as old as your fear; as young as your hope, as old as your despair." ~ Douglas MacArthur

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Highlander Grogg (Buterscotch/Rum flavors)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 21 - DIY Homestead - Autumnal Equinox

September 21, 2022

Day 355 of the Adventure

Back Deck View of the Woods
Autumn arrived today and made a blustery statement about it. I went outside wearing a pair of shorts at 66 degrees. An hour later I was quite chilly and discovered the temps had dropped to 58 degrees. There's a Fall statement for you. In fact, the most perfect day for a campfire so far was also delivering enough wind to make a campfire a bad idea. So, the coffee had to pull double duty and make up for the fire, which it wasn't able to do! Oh well, we got our first taste of it and it still felt pretty good. A spit of rain passed through as well. Just enough to make me take a bunch of tools inside I had been using to finish the utility building soffits. With rain in and out of the days forecast and scattered around the radar, I guess my outside work will get placed on hold today. 

I'm not sure if I've ever shown the view of the woods from our future back deck or not. The picture above was taken while standing and looking out the back door of the cabin. There's no deck there yet but it's only a matter of time. (Just like everything else around here) This is also the direction I was looking when the bobcats were yowling at each other a few weeks ago. Life out in the woods is an adventure just being here watching and listening to it. 

I sometimes refer to our "Cabin in the Woods" as the Deep Woods or the Back Woods. I'm not sure how deep or back they really are. I guess that's a matter of personal definition. When looking to the south, it generally ends a couple hundred yards up the hill at the road. When looking to the east, north or west, it looks like it may go on forever. Those are the directions I look when sitting outside writing these posts. There is a measure of peace and tranquility to the backwoods that I've never found a substitute for. It's easy to simply disappear here and be content to stay. It's taken me 60 years to settle into this as a life and I often question "Why so long?" There may not be a suitable answer, but today is a new day and the woods are displayed in front of me once again. 

Carry On

 Adventure Quote:  “By the time we began to understand enough about what the world to ask the right questions, our visit is over, and someone else is visiting, asking the same questions.” ― d.k. LeVick

Base Camp Coffee of the Day:  Lost up the Creek (Sumatra)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

Thursday, September 22, 2022

September 20 - DIY Homestead - Our Snarky "OH WOW" Birds

September 20, 2022

Day 354 of the Adventure

As the final day of Summer has arrived here in the woods, it has brought with it, a final gasp of heat. Working in the mid 90's gets to be siffling by noon or so. Heat has been the "Modus Operandi" of the year. One we've survived but only with a fair amount of determination and complaining. Although, I would far rather have the Summer overly warm than the Winter overly cold. That being said, if I've sounded too "complainy" over the heat this year, I apologize. 

It's Out There Somewhere
Today, we accomplished something I had been trying to get done for almost a year. There is a bird in our neck of the woods that has a call that sounds like "OH WOW". I'm sure it doesn't simply fly in and watch us until it sees an opportunity to "comment" OH WOW to whatever we happen to be working on. However, sometimes it seems as if it's adding a snarky Oh Wow to one or another of our activities. Say for instance, getting our truck stuck in the mud..... OH WOW! Or, breaking something with the backhoe..... OH WOW! Or, for example, having our cement mixer flip itself over the foundation forms when I got the shovel caught in it while it was turning.....OH WOW!

Yes, the OH WOW bird is ever present here at camp and each time we hear it, we quickly glance around to see what it's commenting on. They are just part of the landscape here and add a bit of light humor to the workday. Here's a link to the OH WOW bird call and I hope that if you have the occasion for an OH WOW moment in your life today, you'll play it back and allow our birds to humiliate you like they enjoy doing with us. OH WOW!

Carry On

 Adventure Quote:  “I do not insist that this is a full adventure, but it is the beginning of one, for this is the way adventures begin.”
― Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra

Base Camp Coffee of the Day:  Lost in the Woods (Colombia/Costa Rica blend)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)
 

September 19 - DIY Homestead - Another Step

September 19, 2022

Day 353 of the Adventure

Autumn Colors from Last Year
The Autumnal Equinox is rapidly creeping up on us signaling the official end of Summer. As if on cue, the temperatures will be in the mid 90's on Wednesday, the last day of Summer. Then the next day, the first day of Fall, the high is predicted to be 72. The seasons are about to start their change and whether we're completely ready for it or not, we're looking forward to it. Our place here is still a little more like a campsite in the woods rather than a functioning homestead. This felt a little disappointing through the Summer as we watched all of our friends harvesting garden produce and we couldn't. Going into the Fall where the change of colors and the wood smoke dominate the landscape, our Cabin in the Woods will feel like a much more natural setting for life. 

Until then, the work continues. The cabin and utility building are getting their final prep for log siding. Now that the tractor is back from the shop, we'll need to finish covering all of the left-over ditches, trenches and holes we had dug for the various construction projects around here. I'm feeling pretty good about our progress this year. In fact, we are also just days away from our one year anniversary at Camp Run-Amuck. I'm looking forward to making a video, documenting the progress we've made this year. 

There's a thought I'd like to mention again related to the Self-Sufficient life. No matter where you are or how far into your journey you are, another step can always be made. If your dream is to live a Homestead or Off-Grid life, either start today or take another step forward today.

Carry On

 Adventure Quote:  “Get out of your mind and become crazy about your future in a creative way!”
― Michael Bassey Johnson

Base Camp Coffee of the Day: Highlander Grogg (Butterscotch/Rum flavors)

Consider Subscribing to our monthly "How-To", Do-It-Yourself" newsletter in the upper right corner of this page.   AND........

Click any of the following links to start your own adventure with us:  

Mountain Craft
Sassafras Tea Making (Chicks in the Sticks video)

DIY Construction Basics Videos
Shelley Painting Trim (Chicks in the Sticks video)

Sunday Morning Outdoor Breakfast Videos
August 28 Breakfast - Campfire Corned Beef Hash
August 7 Breakfast - Chorizo Burritos 
September 4 Breakfast - Outdoor French Toast
September 11 Breakfast - Run-AmuckMuffins
September 18 Breakfast - Dutch Oven Breakfast Frittata

Fun Videos
Run Amuck Road Trip - Thunder Muffins
Run-Amuck Road Trip - Roaring River State Park


Treasured Times Crew to the Rescue Cabin Building (Treasured Times Video)