Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Wiring, bears, and deer

The guys have gotten most of the exterior of the cabin done, so now it's my turn to work on some of the inside.  Having never worked with a log structure before, it is apparent to me that electric is the part of the process that is most different from conventional construction.  Unless you want to look at exposed wires or conduit, you're forced to find ways to snake wire inside and around the logs to keep them hidden--and protected.  For the outside walls, holes were drilled as the logs were laid to create channels for fishing the wires through.  You then locate the channels and mark around where your electric boxes go, and then have to cut out the logs to receive the boxes.  In our case, we used a combination of a jig saw, chisel, and large forstner bit.  

The trickiest part is getting wires to the lights that will serve the first floor, and attach to the beams and pine ceiling that make up the loft floor.  For this, we used a saw to create a groove in the top of the beams and along the walls, in which we place the wire to get it over to a traditional framed wall, which is then drilled out to feed the wire and will be covered with sheetrock.  Once the wires are fed to the lights for the main floor, we can then get it inspected and then call the guys back to install the tongue and groove pine flooring, which will be the floor for the loft and the ceiling for the main floor.  They just have to be sure not to put a nail or screw through the wires that are recessed in to the top of the beams.  Here are some pictures to demonstrate.

framing for future bathroom

Loft framing

wiring from loft to lower framed walls

The wire is fished through grooves made with saw and chisel.  The horizontal run will be covered by flooring and trim, and the vertical run will be behind an interior wall.

timbers are added between the loft beams to run the wire and receive the electric boxes for lights/fans

wire fed from groove in logs down to framed interior wall.  

wire fed from switches to lights over kitchen sink and bathroom vanity

hole to receive switch boxes

4" hole cut through timber to receive box for ceiling light/fan

hole to receive ceiling lights for first floor

view from above loft floor where wire groove meets hole to receive light

upper view of ceiling light box.  This will be covered with pine flooring for loft, so has to be installed before floor goes down.


One of the bigger challenges to gardening in the country is not only dealing with bugs and small pests, but dealing with deer and raccoon.  Deer always like strawberries, sweet corn, and your cool weather crops like lettuce, broccoli, cauliflower, etc.  However, the deer have gone so far as to also eat our raspberries, a problem I've never heard of.  I'm not sure if it's just because the plants are small, or because the year was so dry, or a combination of these.  Either way, I don't anticipate this will be a problem once the plants become larger next year, but the deer are sure having their way with the new raspberry plants this fall.  Here are some pics, along with some pics of the fall crops I planted--lettuce, broccoli, cauliflower, etc.

deer chewed leaves off raspberries

I planted fall plants in late July.  I planted broccoli and cauliflower directly into garden in a row, and then transplanted some and thinned the rest.

transplanted cauliflower and broccoli

pumpkins nipped by frost

butternut squash after frost


Oh, and did I mention we have bears?  My neighbor across the fence caught a large black beer on his deer trail cam.  I hope he doesn't find the garden or berry patch.



Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Duties of a Father

This post may seem off topic and overly philosophical, but it is a notion integrally part of how and why we are doing what we are doing with our homestead.  It's something that I must share if one is to understand what drives us forward.

I grew up in a very modest farm-type family.  I say farm-type because our family farmed when I was very young, but after that was involved in agriculture in various capacities after that, generally working for someone else.  I remember my Dad being the hardest working man I know, and someone that always put his kids and wife before himself.  He never became wealthy; in fact, quite the opposite is true.  But, he managed to raise 4 kids pretty well, I believe.  I am the oldest child in our family and my next brother is a year younger.  We're both married with large families.  We both take our jobs as husbands and fathers very seriously and I credit my dad for that.  I have a college education and law school degree, but the lessons I learned from my father have proven to be the most valuable knowledge I have--and my only regret is that I didn't listen more closely when I was young.

When I was 19, I left home to give my life to God as a priest.  I spent three years in the seminary and was so happy and so at peace.  There was no shred of doubt in my mind that I wanted to serve God completely as a priest.  However, God had other plans, and it took a great deal of prayer, struggle, and tears to come to this realization, and I left.  I felt so alone because nobody could understand why I would leave the seminary, but I did, because in my heart, I knew God was asking me to serve Him elsewhere.

Soon after leaving, I began dating the woman that would become my wife and we now have 5 small children.  I am so blessed and am very thankful for the opportunity to be a father.  But, being a dad is hard work, must harder than I ever expected.  Much harder than I think celibacy would have been.  But, it's my vocation, and one that I live with great love and commitment, if not always the greatest joy.

Here I am, and it's been 10 years since I married and I find myself struggling to identify who I am and how I want to live.  Having discerned a call to be a lawyer, I invested myself in that endeavor, and graduated with a law degree at age 27, with no savings, no land, 2 kids, and plenty of debt.  I am a pretty good lawyer, but my no means a highly successful lawyer in a worldly sense.  I make a decent living, but probably not yet enough to put me in a position better than I would have been had I just skipped college and law school and started farming on my own.

I spend many days wondering to myself, why did God call me to this life?  I find satisfaction in my profession, but feel like the life I desire for my family is always just out of reach.  Once you've jumped on the treadmill of a modern professional career, and the investment that goes with it, it's hard to jump back off.  Student loans, bar dues, mortgages, all of these things that are necessary to live a modern professional life make it almost impossible to escape that life.

We've owned two homes and are working on our third.  We've lost money on the first two.  The dying housing market, along with hyperinflation, make it almost impossible to catch up and life debt free.  My job takes me away from my family for about 60+ hours per week.  While a necessary part of life, I find myself always longing for less work and more family.  I desire to be with my children more, so that I may teach them, guide them, and provide a holy (hopefully) example for them.  I have a greater desire to be with them now that they are young than to enjoy trips and the "good life" when I'm retired.  That's what I desire, but somehow, I feel like it is an impossible endeavor.

We plod on, and continually surrender our lives and this process to the Lord.  I ask the Lord to help me be a good and holy man, a caring husband, a loving father.  Being a good man and loving father in this world is harder than I could have ever imagined.  I thank God for the internal desire to be better, and hope and pray that God's grace will make me so.

Blessings my dear friends.

Monday, September 10, 2012

Fall is fast approaching

After what has seemed like a mercilessly long summer, fall seems to have finally arrived.  You can just feel it when you go outside.  You can smell it.  You can sense it.  The garden senses it too, as things go through their final maturation.  The potatoes we lovingly planted, mulched, and weeded throughout the summer are now brown and ready for digging.  The pumpkins are turning orange.  We're just about sick from eating garden fresh melons, but that doesn't stop us from having just one more.  The sweet corn has been picked and now mowed down with the rotary mower, soil food for next year's crop.  Squash are starting to turn and the tomatoes more than we can keep up with.  Despite the odd summer, we fared much better than many, so for that we are thankful.  Many of the new berries we started this summer are thriving and offer promise for next year.

A few observations and musings:  I think the black plastic with strawberries makes so much sense.  Once we got the strawberries inside the electric fence so the deer would stop munching them down, they took off and are full and lush and ready for the next growing season.  I went through the patch a few times this summer and pulled off the runners so we can have nice healthy plants for next year.

The trellis for the blackberries seems to be working very well too, although for the raspberries I believe I'll keep the top set of wires further apart than I did with the blackberries.  I think it will be good for the tops of the canes to be able to hang out further and have more air between them.  I'll be anxious to see how the blackberries do next year after I've pruned the 2nd year canes.

I have the best luck with cool weather plants (e.g. broccoli, cauliflower, kohlrabi, lettuce) by planting for a fall harvest.  Next year I'll do the same with peas.  You plant the seeds in the garden in late July and by the time they get established, you have 2-3 months of cool growing conditions so the plants thrive and the fruit is tasty and tender.  Unless you're able to get them in early in the spring, they don't seem to mature until the heat of the summer is upon you, which stresses the plants and makes the fruit more bitter.

Here's some updated pictures from the homestead.  The cabin is coming along.  The steel roof went on the last week and they are putting pine up for the soffit, which will then be cut out for vents.  We're still debating on what kind of windows to put in, but hope to reach a decision on that in the next day or two.  Then it will be boring holes in the walls for the wiring and cleaning out the cavities with a stiff piece of wire.  After the wiring is done, we'll then move to insulating the ceiling of the loft and hanging sheetrock.  Finally, we'll finish the kitchen and add hardwood flooring on the main floor (likely hickory at this point).  I'm shopping around for a wood cook stove to warm the cabin and to give us an opportunity to learn to cook with wood.

Sweet corn after harvest

Corn stalks mowed down with rotary mower

Freshly cut hay

Trusty Ford 9N and our dump rake

Raked hay

Raked hay

My little boy helping water the fruit trees


Loft after roof installed

View from woodline

Front of cabin with steel roof almost complete

Rear of cabin with new roof

Pine car siding for soffit (vents to be cut in later)