Thursday, November 30, 2006

What I did over Thanksgiving vacation:
So first of all Rob, Carrie, Sarah, Mike, Zach, Kathie and my Dad came up the weekend of the 18th and 19th for the end of the futility that has been Iowa’s football season. That week we lost to a very mediocre Minnesota team. It remains to bee seen who we will lose to in the Alamo bowl but that should be settled this weekend.
Other than the football game there was lots of fun activity, going to woodworking stores, eating and seeing the new James Bond movie. We had a chocolate cake from the ‘50s grill to celebrate all the Novemberish birthdays, even if everyone couldn’t be present.

Sunday after everyone cleared out Sandy and I loaded up our rented truck and I headed up to our property for a week of working on what is now referred to as the cabin (formerly the sauna). Sandy had to work Monday-Wednesday so I was on my own until Thursday.
I arrived well after dark (it gets dark just after 4pm up there) unpacked the truck and arranged a place to sleep in the cabin. It was a cold night, six degrees but Lucy and I managed ok. The next morning the lake had frozen over completely and as the sun came up the ice started expanding and there were about two hours worth of interesting sounds coming from the ice. I wish I had a recording of it.
After the cold night my goal was to get the wood burning stove installed so I’d have a heat source for the remaining nights. Of course the rest of the week the temperatures were in the 30s and 40s for the most part even at night. Most of the work revolved around installing the chimney and stove pipe and then insulating the attic area. It was a long day but I managed to get through it all.
Much of the next two days were spent installing the pine tongue and groove paneling we had bought at Menard’s back in October. Wednesday and Thursday I built and installed framing for the windows and door. In the early afternoon on Thursday I took a “shower” which consisted of a five-gallon bucket of water I had warmed on the woodstove. I stood out on the deck in the sun and washed up as well as I could, it was chilly.
After the shower I drove out to the gate and unlocked it so Sandy and my Mom could get in when they arrived. I saw lots of wolf tracks along the road on the way out to the gate, I’m pretty sure most of them were less than 24 hours old.
After that I went back and removed and reinstalled the windows since they had just been temporarily mounted in October and then finished up some of the trim stuff inside. Sandy and Mom arrived around 7pm I think, I had been hoping they’d show up with a nice Thanksgiving feast but no one had the energy to do much cooking at that point. So Sandy whipped up some pasta and we saved the grilled turkey breast for the next night.
Friday and Saturday were spent putting the “siding” back on the outside, this was a big job and I didn’t really expect to finish it but Sandy became kind of fixated on getting it done. She yelled at me a few times to get back to work, and with a few additional hours Sunday morning we managed to get through it.


Here's a bit of what the inside looks like now.

This is the finished product outside.
We did manage to have some fun while we were there, Sunday morning my Mom and I (accompanied by Lucy) went skating for about an hour. The ice was thinner than I would’ve preferred but was at least two inches thick everywhere we went and it was nice and smooth.

Saturday morning Sandy and I walked over to visit our neighbor Mr. Nelson. He directed his nephew to give us a tour of the place which was interesting. He has two cabins a workshop a sauna and an outhouse. One of the cabins was his original building on the lot. It originally came from a resort on Brule lake that closed in the ‘60s Jim purchased it at a government auction, disassembled it and hauled it by hand into his lot where he put it back together. It’s always kind of an interesting lesson in local history being around Jim.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

hooray! An update! The cabin looks awesome. Any pictures of the wood stove?

W.F. Decker said...

Hey! Nice work! Looks good. Does being inside of it remind you of the mobile home you first lived in when your mom and I brought you home from the hospital? Certainly can't be much wider than that, although I guess the mobile home was a lot longer. Maybe it would seem like a mansion in comparison???? Did the saw help??

Anonymous said...

Will...from the sound of it, you got lots done! Is all the work done now? Or, is there more to finish? How 'bout a photo of the lake from the cabin?

Betsy said...

I want some cake.

Anonymous said...

Nice skating Kasczynski

Anonymous said...

the cabin looks lovely--the pine paneling is great!