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Goodbye hammock room! |
So, I haven’t written a blog post for some time. I have heard from some of you to get back on the ball (
Amber- you should talk, you haven't updated your blog in almost a year). For whatever reason I haven’t been that inspired to write, but I think that will change soon; change is coming to the garden.
There are a few reasons I guess I haven’t written any blog posts in a while and here are a couple and one is the reason I will start writing again…
Some background:
- This spring I trained for my first marathon in over three years- injury and illness have kept me from running, but this year I was able to train and complete a marathon again, and I hope to resume running regularly.
- My wife and I bought a vintage travel trailer (a 1966 Security Traveler) to restore- my wife has wanted one for a long time. It has been a big and time consuming project. It has kept me really busy, and I have loved it.
- The garden takes care of itself. I have really learned that now that we have no lawn, don’t water anything, and the garden is really dense, there is very little maintenance; mainly cutting things back. So I haven’t written much.
It may seem like restoring a camper has nothing to do with the garden, but in our case it will. In the off season, we will store the camper in the backyard. Actually a better descriptor is that we will incorporate the camper into the landscape. A guest house or a little studio is what we are envisioning complete with a pergola covering it. To accommodate this, I have a lot of work to do.
Although my wife started her own blog to chronicle her camper (check it out at
http://toastercamper.blogspot.com/), here are a few before and after pictures:
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Curbside before |
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Curbside after |
Although I don't show it here, I re-framed nearly the entire camper, re-re-plumbed and re-just about everything. My wife re-upholstered the cushions, sewed the curtains and made the awning (among other things in the camper).
Here are some inside pictures...
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Dinette before |
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Dinette after |
We kept the original stove, sink, oven, icebox (though I super-insulted it) and furnace.
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Kitchen before |
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Kitchen after |
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Bedroom before |
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Bedroom after |
And a couple of more exterior pictures for good measure.
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Streetside before |
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Streetside after |
In order to get it in to the back yard, we had to remove the raised beds in the alley,, including all the soil (thank you Craigslist!), which is done(!), remove fence panels and build a big gate, then I have to clear the area for the camper. This will involve relocating a lot of plants, and it will require me to remove the hammock room (see photo at the top of the post)!
This is a favorite spot in the garden for many, but I don’t mind the change. I like change in the garden.
I built the hammock for my wife a long time ago, and it has served us well, but I think the camper will serve us even better!
So, if you are interested in the hammock pergola, I am going to be getting rid of it, but I haven’t figured out exactly how.
There are still a lot of projects I need to finish, too. For example last fall I started building a fence for our front yard. Started, that is, not finished! To follow my garden and blogging friend Susan's (of
the Bicycle Garden) lead, I am posting my garden projects on a frame on the right, rather than burying them in a post. I am hoping this will hold me more accountable (to myself, I guess).