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Our place here in the heart of Texas. Figure there is about a cord or two of oak stacked in a unique fashion on the front porch. That porch was poured around that oak 60+ years ago...about time to enlarge the hole in the roof. We have 23 mature oaks on our 1/2 acre in town. In-laws have 160 acres 15 minutes from us. Loving life.
 

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Cross Cut . . . you don't by any chance live on High Street do you? I was down your way on Thanksgiving doing some geocaching at Sewall Woods and passed a home that had a bunch of firewood in the yard . . . of course I realize here in Maine having firewood in the yard is not all that unusual.
 
NICE property, too bad its in CT ;) (I grew up in Vernon)

Does your 2.5 acres include the pond? I would like to build a similiar sized pond on my 3 acres.



Here's some photos of the house we bought in November. The decking has all been replaced now - the work was just finished last week - but I don't have photos of that yet.The tree to the right is a hickory that I'm planning to convert into heat - there's another, larger hickory to the left that will probably suffer the same fate. In fact, there are probably a dozen or so hardwood trees that I can take down myself - and a storm took down a huge hickory in the woods off to the right after these pictures were taken.

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Gotta look close - but the house is left of center in the back. The structure to the right of the pond is our post and beam barn. The pond itself is about a half acre in size and is entirely on our property.

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Full wrap around decking - all 4 sides. The south side main portion of the new deck is 12'X36'.
There's a large open fireplace on the main floor and in the basement there's a Franklin fireplace in what will be my office when we move in over the next few months. we're planning to get a VC Merrimack insert for the living room and maybe a Jotul 602 for my office.

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This picture was taken by the realtor from the living room - it looks like there's another building across the pond - but there isn't...that's actually the reflection in the glass slider door of the camera she used. Beyond those trees across the pond is a road.

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and this is the barn - a lot of that overgrowth around it has been trimmed back and the brush pile to the left is gone - but there are plenty of brush and limb piles all around the yard (2.5 acres) so I'll have plenty of kindling.
 
NICE property, too bad its in CT ;) (I grew up in Vernon)

Does your 2.5 acres include the pond? I would like to build a similiar sized pond on my 3 acres.

I used to live in Vernon myself. Back in the early 80s I was the live in superintendent at a 164 unit apartment complex on the corner of Center and Regan Roads. After that I lived for a while up in Springville Mill in Rockville.

This house is in East Haddam. The pond is entirely on the property - so, yes the 2.5 acres includes the pond. The former owner had the dam and spillway for it built before he built the house. It's a nice feature and I can understand why he did it -there's groundwater running into the pond in three spots around it. If the pond wasn't there we'd have a swamp down that end. The house is high and dry as well as the land to the north of the house.

We've also got 11 acres of woodland up in Canterbury with frontage on the Quinebaug - between that and the trees I have to take down at the house in East Haddam, we should have no lack for firewood in the foreseeable future.
 
Nice, I grew up in the south part of town off of lake street.

That sounds like my property, the house is built on the edge of the property and smack dab in the middle of the property its low, swampy and useless with a small brook running along the edge of the property, only thing growing there is a couple of swamp maples and some small pines. Was thinking about clearing the woods out a big digging a hole and having the brook run through it, definitly have the perfect spot for it.



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I used to live in Vernon myself. Back in the early 80s I was the live in superintendent at a 164 unit apartment complex on the corner of Center and Regan Roads. After that I lived for a while up in Springville Mill in Rockville.

This house is in East Haddam. The pond is entirely on the property - so, yes the 2.5 acres includes the pond. The former owner had the dam and spillway for it built before he built the house. It's a nice feature and I can understand why he did it -there's groundwater running into the pond in three spots around it. If the pond wasn't there we'd have a swamp down that end. The house is high and dry as well as the land to the north of the house.

We've also got 11 acres of woodland up in Canterbury with frontage on the Quinebaug - between that and the trees I have to take down at the house in East Haddam, we should have no lack for firewood in the foreseeable future.
 
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I used to live in Vernon myself. Back in the early 80s I was the live in superintendent at a 164 unit apartment complex on the corner of Center and Regan Roads. After that I lived for a while up in Springville Mill in Rockville.

This house is in East Haddam. The pond is entirely on the property - so, yes the 2.5 acres includes the pond. The former owner had the dam and spillway for it built before he built the house. It's a nice feature and I can understand why he did it -there's groundwater running into the pond in three spots around it. If the pond wasn't there we'd have a swamp down that end. The house is high and dry as well as the land to the north of the house.

We've also got 11 acres of woodland up in Canterbury with frontage on the Quinebaug - between that and the trees I have to take down at the house in East Haddam, we should have no lack for firewood in the foreseeable future.

Wife lived in Rockville for a few years with her now ex-husband . . . moved to Maine though to escape the madness there.
 
Cross Cut . . . you don't by any chance live on High Street do you? I was down your way on Thanksgiving doing some geocaching at Sewall Woods and passed a home that had a bunch of firewood in the yard . . . of course I realize here in Maine having firewood in the yard is not all that unusual.
Nope, I'm about 2 blocks East of High on Dummer St.

It's really an unfortunate name for a street, yes, it is pronounced just like summer, but with a D. :p
 
I used to live on town street. Lovely place, particularly driving over the river in winter with the eagles right about bridge height.

It is a lovely town indeed. Our house is out near Lake Hayward.. Maybe 5 minutes from Devil's Hopyard. Driving through there it's hard to believe you're still in CT.
 
The deck's almost done....

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I don't know why they put a garage door there....there's never been a driveway leading to it. We've got a set of double entry doors on order to replace the garage door. I'll use the area under the deck to store dry, seasoned firewood.

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facing south - you can just barely see the road beyond the pines at the end of the pond.

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Looking at these pics I feel like I live in a shack lol..

Ray
 
ChipTam: Nice place you got there. Are you actually from Newfoundland and living in michigan? Or are you a person from Michigan with a summer home in Newfoundland? ;) There are a few American retirees who have purchased summers homes out my way: affordable ocenaside property! I would move to Newfoundland in a second but getting to/from the Island when your family is on mainland becomes a PITA.

Rideau: you're right; there's no place like home. But I am a firm believer than home is where you hang your hat.

CHuckster: that is a nice field of sunflowers. I bet the birds love it come August!!
 
I have been waiting for some snow, it always looks better! The first is the view of the pond from the deck.


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Note the ash bucket on the front step (it's empty)

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ChipTam: Nice place you got there. Are you actually from Newfoundland and living in michigan? Or are you a person from Michigan with a summer home in Newfoundland? ;) There are a few American retirees who have purchased summers homes out my way: affordable ocenaside property! I would move to Newfoundland in a second but getting to/from the Island when your family is on mainland becomes a PITA.

Rideau: you're right; there's no place like home. But I am a firm believer than home is where you hang your hat.

CHuckster: that is a nice field of sunflowers. I bet the birds love it come August!!

Hi Swedishchef,
We're Michiganders who grew up on the east coast of the United States and missed the ocean. We vacationed in Newfoundland for a couple of summers and then found a nineteenth-century home in Trinity in desperate need of repair. We purchased it about 15 years ago and spent the first five summers working on it. I'm a cabinetmaker by trade so I was able to do a lot of the work myself. My wife and I are now retired and spend about 5 1/2 months in Canada.

By the way, about 25 years ago, my wife and I took a driving trip up to the Gaspe and Point Perce (sorry no accents on my computer). You live in a beautiful part of the world! I especially remember the bee-hive ovens by the side of the road where you could purchase the best home-made bread right out of the oven.

Chip Tam
 
Hey Chip!

Gotcha! We can call you a converted Newfie! Do you drive or fly into St John's?

Perce is a nice place. I was not raised here, I moved here 6 years ago and will likely be moving in the next 2. It is a wonderful spot and we go to Perce quite a few times in the summer for some R&R. I am 45 mins away from Perce in the town of Gaspe.

There's nothing better than home made bread...ugh.

Andrew
 
Hey Chip!

Gotcha! We can call you a converted Newfie! Do you drive or fly into St John's?

Perce is a nice place. I was not raised here, I moved here 6 years ago and will likely be moving in the next 2. It is a wonderful spot and we go to Perce quite a few times in the summer for some R&R. I am 45 mins away from Perce in the town of Gaspe.

There's nothing better than home made bread...ugh.

Andrew

Hi Andrew,
We drive to St. John's. Actually, we're about 2 1/2 hours north-east of St. John's on the Bonavista Peninsula. The drive from Michigan takes us about 3 1/2 days although last November it took us an additional 4 days to get back to Michigan as we waited for the seas to calm down on the Gulf of St. Laurence and the ferry to resume it's schedule. Going to Newfoundland, we cross the Detroit River to Windsor and go all the way through Canada. We get off Route 2 at Riviere du Loup and head south-east through New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. Talking about it, I'm already missing Newfoundland.

Chip
 

It's a beautiful place...but the taxes and politicians are brutal. That scenery right there is one of the few reasons we are still here. Darn hard to duplicate, without finding a pretty equal set of negatives!!
 
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