Wow...what a year it has been.
2008 will go down in the books as the most difficult, and most productive (in the sense of rebuilding a home) in my life.
June 11, 2008 record floods in the Midwest destroyed my lakeside home.
After an agonizing time I decided to for-go any potential buy-out from FEMA and rebuild.
Of course, there was no way I was rebuilding at the same level. So I jacked my house up and now I live in the trees.
There is nothing slower then rebuilding after a flood.
I hooked my little stove up in early September when my house was finally let down on its new foundation. It sure did take out the chill on those Saturday mornings durring construction.
Little did I know it would be till December 5th when a new modern invention called ELECTRICITY would return to my humble little cabin.
In that interim that little stove burned anything I thew in there, and only returned beloved heat. It was not picky, 2X4's and old barn boards cut up, plywood...it was all just dandy.
Now that I am starting to settle in for the finishing work it makes me reflect on how difficult it must have been for our forefathers who heated only with wood, and lit there nites by Oil and Candle.
The little stove that could made my house a home durring this crucial period, and I am thankful I had the resources and the knowledge to put it to use.
2008 will go down in the books as the most difficult, and most productive (in the sense of rebuilding a home) in my life.
June 11, 2008 record floods in the Midwest destroyed my lakeside home.
After an agonizing time I decided to for-go any potential buy-out from FEMA and rebuild.
Of course, there was no way I was rebuilding at the same level. So I jacked my house up and now I live in the trees.
There is nothing slower then rebuilding after a flood.
I hooked my little stove up in early September when my house was finally let down on its new foundation. It sure did take out the chill on those Saturday mornings durring construction.
Little did I know it would be till December 5th when a new modern invention called ELECTRICITY would return to my humble little cabin.
In that interim that little stove burned anything I thew in there, and only returned beloved heat. It was not picky, 2X4's and old barn boards cut up, plywood...it was all just dandy.
Now that I am starting to settle in for the finishing work it makes me reflect on how difficult it must have been for our forefathers who heated only with wood, and lit there nites by Oil and Candle.
The little stove that could made my house a home durring this crucial period, and I am thankful I had the resources and the knowledge to put it to use.