Looking around

We had a very foggy morning today, and there was still fog when I went out to do my rounds. I decided to see if I could get some good pictures from behind the barn, and ended up checking things out further. I have not actually gone done this way, this far, since we moved here, so much of what I was seeing was new to me.

The first thing I stopped to check out was some fencing around trees. There used to be a pig pen and a manure pile in the area. I can see that the fencing went around the trees, but I am unsure of why. It was done long ago, and much of it has fallen.

Continue reading

Old Roof

Thanks to the cows’ trampling, I was able to get further into the back of an old log building that is collapsing in the outer yard.

20180908.oldroof.lichen

The remains of the roof, long since stripped of shingles, are rotting away.  In the process, it is supporting new life.

The Re-Farmer

Trampled access

After a lovely rainfall this morning, I took a walk around the outer yard to take a closer look at the areas the cows got into.

They did a fabulous job of trampling down the grass and burdock.

20180908.trampled.png

 

In fact, their trampling meant I could access places I couldn’t before, including the door to the old chicken coop.  It had been blocked off by burdock before.

20180908.old.coop.door.png

When my parents bought the property, this log building was the summer kitchen.  They eventually converted it to a chicken coop.

Yesterday, while walking around with my sister and our relative from Poland, I tried to open the door, but couldn’t.  There is some shifting in the building, which resulted in a board that ran horizontally across the top of the door, now running across the door itself.

Overnight, however, something has managed to pull the bottom of the door out!  It was not like this yesterday.  The other side of the door is also partially pulled out, but there’s a board in the middle that’s basically jammed into the ground.

I thought I might be able to just pull the door off, but it’s pretty stuck, at top and bottom.  I’d need to get some tools to get it done, but there’s no reason to do that right now.

What I was able to do, however, was stick my phone through the opening and use voice command to take some pictures.  These made for my first view inside this building since I left the farm, 32 years ago!

20180908.old.coop.inside1.png

It looks like no one mucked it out since before my parents stopped having chickens!

Also, it looks like someone started using it to dump things in.  :-(

The openings at the back are the nesting boxes.  The roosts are on the right, with stuff stacked on them.  On the far right of the photo, you can see what was a ramp for the chickens to use to get up there.

20180908.old.coop.inside2

The caged area on the left is where my parents kept new baby chicks until they were big enough to join the adult birds. We were able to set up a heat lamp in there for them.  In the wall under the window was a little door near the floor.  When we had chickens, there was a fenced area around two sides of the building, enclosing the wall with the main door, and the wall with the window. Outside this little door was a partitioned off area, so we could close off the chicks from the adult chickens outside.  When the chicks were grown enough, we would just leave the doors open for all the chickens to access.  Most times, spring through fall, we opened the door to the fence during the day, so the chickens could range freely.

After checking out the old chicken coop, I went over to the pump shack to check the power cord to the storage building.  From the outside, everything looked fine, so I went in.  I’m glad I did, because I found that when they came out of the building yesterday, the light was forgotten on!

I found the problem, too.

The cable coming through the wall cannot reach the outlet, so there is a short power cord in between.  It’s one of those power cords that, when it’s plugged in at one end, there is a light that turns on at the other end.  When I came in yesterday, I could see the light, but the cable through the wall was gone.  I guess, after I left the pump shack to find the cable, my sister unplugged the short power cord, then went outside. When I found the cable the cows and pulled out, I pushed it through the opening in the wall again.  My sister went back in, grabbed it and plugged the cable in, but didn’t plug the short power cord back into the outlet!

It was a relief to find that.  I still checked for power in the storage building, just to be sure, and it’s working fine.  No damaged cables! :-)

So while the cows did get into all sorts of things, they caused very little damage, and have actually made some things easier to get to. :-)

The Re-Farmer

 

 

Around outside

A last post about my walkabout in our yard.

spruce.grove.canopy

The spruce grove next to the house might be what’s preventing us from being able to get more stable internet (with better data plans!), but it sure is beautiful.

spruce.grove.from.garden.view

This view is from the end of our garden near the road to our driveway.  As you can see, there are quite a lot of downed trees in there.  Quite a few dead trees that we will eventually need to cut down, too.

Well, we’ll have plenty of wood for our fire pit, when the time comes!

shed.wall

In a corner of the yard, near the fire pit, is one of several old log cabins on the property.  The wall facing into the yard has vertical boards for siding.

There used to be a gooseberry bush at the opposite corner.  I used to love picking the juicy, tart green berries and eat them when I was a child.

Years later, I discovered that they were supposed to be eaten after they turned red and soft.  I’d always thought that was when they’d gone bad, because they tasted so bland. :-D

I don’t know what happened to that gooseberry bush.  It’s not there anymore, and other trees are growing near where it was.

This wall here faces what used to be an open area where my late brother had his “bike shop.”  There were all sorts of bike parts and pieces that he would use to cobble bikes together.

Quite a lot of those parts and pieces seem to still be there, rusting away.

shed.corner

I’ve read that this type of corner joining for log buildings is a style mostly unique to our region.

This old shed was used for storage for as long as I can remember.  I don’t know what its original purpose was.

shed.inside

This is part of the inside.  The roof is collapsing on both sides.  The rafters are full of all sorts of things.  I have no idea what that machine is, but it looks like it runs the length of the building.

The stuff jammed into there is amazing.  An old wringer washer.  An electric stove.  What looks like a very, very old washer and drier set.  Pieces of antenna.  Head and foot boards.  Old window frames.  A bike that I think used to be ours.  Tires.

I don’t think anything in there is salvageable.  It all just got shoved in there and forgotten about.

old.chicken.coop

This old log building looks to be in better shape.

That’s a relative statement.

This is actually outside the fenced part of our yard, but is still part of the larger yard that includes the barn and various outbuildings (and cars, trucks, tractors, hay rakes, fuel tanks… ).  Before my father bought the property, this was the “summer kitchen.”  There was a wood stove and the cooking and canning would be done in here in the summer, rather than in the main house, so the house wouldn’t get overheated.  I imagine it reduced the risk of burning the house down, too. :-/

We used it as a chicken coop.  There was a walled in area around two sides of the building for a chicken run, though we would let them out during the day in the summer.

I briefly considered going over to look inside.

I changed my mind.

old.chicken.coop.burs

I just didn’t feel like working my way through the barrier of burs!

church.bird.house

We’re back in the yard, next to the house again.

My late brother built this bird house for my mother, and it can be seen from our dining room window.  My mother is a strongly religious person, so he built it in the shape of a church.

It still gets used by birds every year.  I am hoping that we will have a chance to take it down and fix it up this year.  Maybe prune back some of the branches around the post, too.  Once we have a better idea of what’s actually growing there.  It’s in what was one of my mother’s many little flower gardens around the yard, but it seems to be all bushes now.

What I would love to do is have a deck built along this side of the house, with a ramp leading to the end of the house where the current main entry way is, and the direction we need to go to get to the van, so that my husband doesn’t have to fight with the door while trying to get his walker up and down the steps.  Then we’d also be able to start using what is supposed to be the front door.  If that happens, this garden bed will likely need to be taken at least partly out.  Which would not be a bad thing, I am thinking.

The Re-Farmer