Building a WoodshedGSaturday, November 14th, 2015 I am pleased to report that Tyler and I have just set a new homesteading record. We designed and built a pretty sizable structure—a three-sided shed to protect our newly-sawn lumber—in three measly days. This was by far our least difficult build ev...
Milling Trees into Lumber: Complete!GSunday, November 1st, 2015 With the milling process nearing its end, Tara and I spent the morning hurriedly preparing a place to store our new wood supply. I knew we needed to do this weeks ago, but the importance of this task didn't really register until the lumber started ...
Milling Trees into Lumber with a Wood MizerGTuesday, October 27th, 2015 Over the past few years, we've amassed quite a collection of felled trees. Tyler's Note: Having recently taken a chainsaw safety course for loggers, almost every one of these photos scares the crap out of me. There are crazy unsafe...
Building A Pony WallGThursday, May 8th, 2014 For the last few days, we have been framing a pony wall around the perimeter of our house. The main purpose of this framing is to raise our strawbales above grade so they can't get wet, but we're also going to use portions of it for storage. Every ...
Timber Frame Cottage Ridge Beam & RaftersGMonday, April 28th, 2014 After everyone left yesterday, I had a panicky feeling in my stomach about all that we had left to do. The king posts needed to be installed, as did the ridge beam and the rafters. How on earth would we be able to do this by ourselves? I was re-li...
Timber Frame Cottage Frame Raising: The Big Day, Part ThreeGSunday, April 27th, 2014 After lunch, we finish raising the last bent and place the two wall plates. Next up, we check to see if the assembly is square. Our first measurement shows we're out by a whopping five inches from corner to corner. At this point, Rick and Charlie...
Timber Frame Cottage Raising: The Big Day, Part TwoGSunday, April 27th, 2014 Shortly after raising the first bent, our dear friend Jenna arrives bearing a gorgeous loaf of wood-fired-oven-baked bread, and her tiny, bleating lamb, Brianna. We pause to greet her, and to hold the lamb, cooing at its perfect adorableness, buryi...
Timber Frame Cottage Raising: The Big Day, Part OneGSunday, April 27th, 2014 As I arrange bananas, a water jug, and several containers of snacks on a makeshift plywood table this morning, I do so with a feeling of peace. With the stress of non-stop preparation and the uncertainty of assembling the first bent of our home be...
Timber Frame Cottage Raising: The Dress RehearsalGSaturday, April 26th, 2014 It's a clammy, dark afternoon. I just picked up Tyler from the airport after his week in California, and we've been home for less than an hour. Already we're at the house site, going over final preparations for the frame raising of our little cotta...
Timber Frame Cottage Raising: PreparationGFriday, April 25th, 2014 While Tyler spent the week working in sunny California, I held down the fort and got us ready for the long awaited frame raising of our little timber frame cottage! I set a date, invited some friends, and then proceeded to obsess about the weather ...
Tar Paper on Workshop Roof DeckingGSunday, April 20th, 2014 This evening, Bocoup is flying me to Santa Monica to kick off a project with a new client. While planning for this, I asked our office manager to book the flight as late as possible this Sunday—I wanted to take full advantage of the sunny weekend....
Workshop Roof Decking CompleteGFriday, September 27th, 2013 The decking for our workshop roof is complete! Unfortunately, things didn't go exactly as planned. I was hoping the last course of boards would overlap the ridge by a few inches on either side, allowing for a small miter cut to form a nice seam a...
Tyler-Be-NimbleGThursday, September 26th, 2013 Tyler and I may have worked our butts off together on the workshop rafters, but this roofing job is 99.99% his effort. While I stay on terra firma, focusing on book stuff, or raking dirt around the site to spread clover seed, he perches on our roof...
Roofin'GWednesday, September 25th, 2013 Each evening this week, Jeremy has sent me a text, letting me know if he'll be able to help with the workshop. He doesn't ask if I need another pair of hands, he simply arrives as if it were a foregone conclusion that we'll be roofing together onc...
Faces on ThingsGTuesday, September 24th, 2013 Tara and I are constantly spotting faces on inanimate objects. Apparently, our shared subconscious is so busy anthropomorphizing things that we don't even have to point them out. We just say, "Do you see it?", and invariably we'll both identify t...
Laying Roof DeckingGMonday, September 23rd, 2013 This morning, I climbed onto the roof of our workshop and I didn't come down until dusk. I was busy loping around on our rafters with a mallet, drill, and saw in hand, laying courses of tongue and groove roof decking. It feels so good to have rea...
Roof Decking BeginsGFriday, September 20th, 2013 This morning, our neighbor Charlie arrived bright and early with a bucket of tools, ready to help us lay the first course of tongue and groove decking on both sides of our workshop. It was a fairly easy task—we just measured from the peak of the r...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: The Last RafterGThursday, September 19th, 2013 We did it! The rafters are complete! ...
Tongue & Groove Roof Decking DeliveryGWednesday, September 18th, 2013 After parting ways with Jahnavi and Addison in Saratoga Springs, we raced back home, arriving just in time to receive a shipment of roof decking for our grindbygg workshop. We now have nearly two hundred kiln-dried 2"x6"x16' tongue and groove spru...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: Rafters, Part TwoGFriday, September 13th, 2013 Ever since we got over the hump of raising the first rafter, our grindbygg roof building project has been going fairly smoothly. It's actually pretty simple thanks to the jigs Peter left us with. The hardest part of the process is getting the raf...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: The First RafterGSunday, September 1st, 2013 When Peter and the students left last week, I was crestfallen. Though I was excited about the huge progress we'd made, my enthusiasm was deeply underscored with a bitter cocktail of exhaustion and gnawing concern about the work that remained. Ins...
AftermathGMonday, August 19th, 2013 It's 4:00AM when our alarm sounds, and we miraculously manage to rouse ourselves to stumble out of bed. Trent is up, packing, making coffee for the last time in the kitchen tent. Soon after, Peter and Amy join him for their morning brew. Together ...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: Day Seven NightGSunday, August 18th, 2013 By the time one wall plate is seated properly and the other is placed where it can be maneuvered without the excavator, it's finally time for a very late supper around 9PM. We're strung out, completely and utterly spent, and way past the point of b...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: Day Seven AfternoonGSunday, August 18th, 2013 Watching Peter work is a sight to behold. He's driven and focused on his art, and so single-minded that he reminds me of Tyler when he's programming. Like Tyler, he powers through the day with seemingly superhuman stamina, hardly remembering to eat...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: Day Seven MorningGSunday, August 18th, 2013 It's Sunday, the very last day of our extended Grindbygg raising. We have two bents to raise today, plus the two wall plates that will sit atop all the tie beams. Our small group (Kit, Bruce, Trent and Roger remain) is hopeful and dedicated, and we...
Grindbygg Timber Framing: Day SixGSaturday, August 17th, 2013 Another day longer, another grind stronger... ...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day Five EveningGFriday, August 16th, 2013 It's the last day, and everyone is working like mad to ensure we'll be ready to raise the first bent (or grind, if you're Norwegian)… Once that task is successfully completed, we drill peg-holes and hammer in the first of our h...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day Five MorningGFriday, August 16th, 2013 It's the final day of our workshop, and I feel calmer and more at peace than I've felt in weeks. My worst nightmare is definitely coming true (or parts of it at least): there's no way we're going to be able to finish today. Thankfully, the prospect...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day FourGThursday, August 15th, 2013 It's day four of the workshop and we're starting to feel slightly competent! Here are some pictures from another day at the worksite: Tomorrow afternoon, our final class day, Rick will be here to raise one of the bents...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: ThoughtsGWednesday, August 14th, 2013 Though each day of this course is filled with the highs and lows of learning new skills, and each evening is spent with laughter and camaraderie by the fire, Tyler and I are both filled with mounting dread. Here we are at the end of day three, and ...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day ThreeGWednesday, August 14th, 2013 Our alarm sounds at 7AM. Laying in bed, we are both groggy and exhausted. "Are you ready?" Tyler asks. "Not yet," I reply. In a few minutes, it'll be time for another action-packed day of hosting our timber framing course, but for now, I want to ba...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day TwoGTuesday, August 13th, 2013 The morning dawns dark and wet, with torrential rains that soak our land. Thankfully, the canopy that Tyler, Peter and Amy built last night is holding up well. Without that very important piece of gear, there's no way we would be able to accomplis...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Rainproofing the WorksitePGMonday, August 12th, 2013 Class is over for the day; dark clouds are looming, and the forecast is calling for rain. With only four work days left in our course, we can't afford to lose any time to inclement weather. So, after dinner, Peter and I spring to action. Jumping...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day OneGMonday, August 12th, 2013 I awake to the sound of water being pumped from our well, and the smell of coffee brewing. I smile. Outside, workshop participants are congregating in the camp kitchen we've set up, making themselves at home. Breakfast is eaten standing, or around ...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Day ZeroGSunday, August 11th, 2013 This morning, our friend Jenna arrives bright and early with the intention of helping us peel bark for our timber frame. Thanks to everyone's help yesterday, however, we're done! Instead, we focus our attention on the outdoor shower that Tyler and...
Peeling Bark with FriendsGSaturday, August 10th, 2013 When I was little, one of my favorite books was A New Coat for Anna, in which a young girl and her mother spent an entire year getting all of the components ready for her new winter coat. First they visited the shepherd and his flock, bartering for...
Grindbygg Timber Framing Course: Site StagingGThursday, August 8th, 2013 Yesterday evening, our timber framing instructor Peter, his wife Amy, and their two girls, Robin and Linnea arrived! This morning, we went through the workshop site, making sure everything was in order. Peter showed us where he wanted all of our f...
Peeling BarkGTuesday, August 6th, 2013 Today, we woke early with the intention of spending the day debarking the posts of our timber frame workshop. We brought our big water jug down to the workshop site, and Tyler ordered a pizza from East Arlington Takout so we wouldn't crash and burn...
Timber Framing Course: Norwegian Grindbygg "Trestle Frame" GWednesday, April 3rd, 2013 This August, join us with master timber framer Peter Henrikson to hand-craft and raise a one-of-a-kind Norwegian Grindbygg workshop in Arlington, Vermont. This unique style of roundwood construction is the oldest known building technique in Norway...
Timber Framing at Going Slowly HQGTuesday, April 2nd, 2013 Last summer, Tara and I fell in love with timber framing, thanks to a fantastic course offered by North House Folk School in Grand Marais, Minnesota. There, in an idyllic workshop on the shore of Lake Superior, under the instruction of Peter Henri...
What We're Up ToGSunday, March 17th, 2013 We're in Minnesota again! Our last days in Vermont this winter were busy, a whirlwind of cleaning and packing and readying our camper for two months without human inhabitants. The day before we left, we were treated with a snowstorm which deposit...
1/12th Scale Timber Frame Model HouseGMonday, October 1st, 2012 Awhile back, I found Tyler crouched on the floor, with a determined look on his face, scissors, tape, and cardboard strewn about him. Much to my delight, he was painstakingly constructing a scale model of our timberframe cottage! Using Peter's bl...
Designing Our House: Things I KnowGMonday, August 13th, 2012 I have been designing my ideal home for literally as long as I can remember. As a young girl, I daydreamed about living in a rustic log cabin, deep in the woods, or in an old farmhouse, complete with wrap-around porches and rocking chairs. As a t...
Hedstrom Lumber Mill TourGMonday, July 23rd, 2012 Before leaving Grand Marais this morning, we went on a tour of Hedstrom Lumber Mill. The wood for our timber frame was cut there (white pine harvested from northern Minnesota). I really had no idea what to expect, and consequently, I was complete...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day NineGSunday, July 22nd, 2012 Today was our last day in the shop, and we spent most of it adding flourishes to our wall plates and rafters. Since they were too long for Tara (our designated bandsaw baller) to cut on her own, I played a supporting role in the effort. First, we...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day EightGSaturday, July 21st, 2012 Today, I took a break from doing layout to make the knee-braces for our house. The tenons were quick and easy, just a few 45° cuts on the chop saw. Shaping the curves that Tyler and Peter had drawn on them was serious business, though. One false...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day SevenGFriday, July 20th, 2012 It's a typical morning at the Folk School. About an hour before class is slated to begin, we leave camp and head for the wood shop, idly chatting about the work we're planning to complete when we get there. As usual, we're the first to arrive. O...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day SixGThursday, July 19th, 2012 We had an optional half day at the shop today, and it came at just the right time. I started getting grumpy this morning about some difficult cutting on our primary posts, and Tara was cranky about having to redo her timber markings three times to...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day FiveGWednesday, July 18th, 2012 It is so rewarding to be making something tangible for our homesteading project. For the past eight months, the only thing we've done to pursue our goal of moving to Vermont is continually drain our bank account in an effort to pay off our land. ...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day FourGTuesday, July 17th, 2012 It feels so good to be building a home for ourselves, and to know that our future life as homesteaders is just around the corner. Today's woodworking session was another round of lakeside, house-building paradise. We spent most of the day working...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day ThreeGMonday, July 16th, 2012 During the past two sessions, I felt like I was barely treading water in a sea of new information. Without so much as a single high school shop class under my woodworking belt, I just couldn't visualize what I was doing or why. Even though I was ...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day TwoGSunday, July 15th, 2012 Today, I will be facing two fears I have been harboring about building our house ever since the idea started approaching reality. One, my inability to make a straight cut in anything, free-hand or otherwise, and two, the fact that I consistently m...
North House Timber Framing Workshop: Day OneGSaturday, July 14th, 2012 Before class this morning, we talked with our instructor, Peter, and negotiated some changes to our little house to make it more livable—a slightly taller loft area, longer gables and eaves to protect our intended straw bale walls, and two feet of ...
To North House Folk SchoolGFriday, July 13th, 2012 I was poking around on the internet about a week ago when I randomly discovered the North House Folk School in Grand Marais, Minnesota. As I was paging through their tempting list of classes (stuff like birch bark weaving, black ash basketry and k...