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Showing posts with label old farmstead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label old farmstead. Show all posts

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Forgotten

 

Only a very short walk from my house


an old farmstead has lost its owner.




Only a few months ago cattle were fed from this big haystack.





A bachelor farmer lived here.




Look at the size of that saw blade.





He said he didn't need a wife 
"because he had a woman  (that's me) 
running through his fields every day". 




Will someone take over this farm? 
Probably not.  Farming is hard and has few rewards. 




This fertilizer spreader shows how many years it has been dragged through the fields...
it has picked up bailing twine that will never come off.  
And the water tank will never be moved to a pasture.  




 The Danes knew how to build fine cabins.  Cabins which have stood straight and proud for more than a hundred years. 




This one probably built by the same family. 




The granary is still full of barley.





It takes a lot of equipment to run a farm. 





There is order in a forgotten corner.





He will not leave his owner's house.  

I have known  him since he was a puppy, now he barks at me.  




Not to worry, a neighbor is taking care of him.  His brother has already moved over. 


Have a great weekend dear Friends, 

Gina 

Partial Repost


Friday, May 29, 2015

Abandoned



Only a very short walk from my house

an old farmstead has lost its owner.







Only a few months ago cattle were fed from this big haystack.







A bachelor farmer lived here.






Look at the size of this saw blade.








He said he didn't need a wife 
"because he had a woman (that's me) running through his fields every day" 






Will someone take over this farm? 
Probably not.  Farming is hard and has few rewards. 







This fertilizer spreader shows how many years it has been dragged through the fields...it has picked up bailing twine that will never come off.  
And the water tank will never be moved to a pasture.  






 The Danes knew how to build fine cabins.  Cabins which have stood straight and proud for more than a hundred years. 





This one probably built by the same family.  






The granary is still full of barley.








It takes a lot of equipment to run a farm. 







There is order in a forgotten corner.






He will not leave his owner's house.  

I have known  him since he was a puppy, now he barks at me.  





Not to worry, a neighbor is taking care of him.  His brother has already moved over. 


Have a great weekend dear Friends, 

Gina 



Sunday, April 8, 2012

Down the Country Lane, Part II





Continued from here 

While staying at the Erma Hotel, in Cody Wyoming, a few years ago Gene surprised me by having a Western Saddle made by famous Saddle Maker, Jim Kelly. 




Mr Kelly was working on a large order for a riding club in Europe. My saddle would not be finished for another 2 years.


That would give us just enough time to find a few acres to keep a couple of horses near our house in the country. 





We lived in the city.





But wanted to spend the weekends in the country. We fell in love with a run down old stone house near Spring City, central Utah.   I called it the "Fellini" house.  It reminded me of scenes from the movie "Amacord"

I located the owner but he wouldn't sell. 






Instead, we found another run down place, a one-hundred year old simple farmstead. I called it "my foot in the door" to the charming little town of Spring City.






We needed to add a guest cottage. We moved this one from across the street.






It needed a little attention.







While we were looking for a guest cottage to move to our old homestead, we found a piece of property with an old log cabin.  However, it was decided that it was too difficult to move. 






BUT THERE WAS THIS BEAUTIFUL POND,

and we couldn't get it out of our heads.

While looking for horse pasture we immediately thought of this abandoned farm and wondered if the owner would sell us 5 acres. 

He sold us the entire farm and the pond. The pond is spring fed, flowing at 39 gallons per minute. We immediately filed a patent,  claiming the water rights and waited for my saddle to arrive. 


Two  years later, early one morning, clear out of the blue, Gene asked:
How would you like to build a new house by the Pond?



A new house? Why? I was perfectly happy living in the city during the week and in the country, in our simple little farmhouse,  on weekends.


Within a week I found our new house...in House Beautiful Magazine.  A house that was built for an Italian artist in Callistoga, California. We  contacted the architects.

They provided us with the basic drawings and we designed the rest.
Gene and I had been visiting and studying 16th c. architect Andrea Palladio's country houses in the Veneto Region of Italy. They all had one thing in common, strict symmetry, a hall in the middle with rooms on either side. Perfect for us!


 We were lucky, we found a young builder in our area who was excited about building our new house.

I appointed myself as General Contractor. Being the General was a little like playing Sherlock Holmes.  The Internet, in 1994, was not what it is today.  I spent a lot of time visiting new construction sites...  gleaning information from builders and contractors. 

Building our house was the most wonderful experience.
We only had one mishap and as it turned out, it was meant to be.
While transporting a large custom made glass door to the building site it flew out of our truck and landed in a million pieces on the side of a mountain.  I remembered seeing the ballroom doors from the legendary Hotel Utah in a salvage yard.  They now became our Library Doors instead.





Our house was built and for only minor finishes,  was completed in 6 months.  My saddle arrived at the same time.




The problem with living in a small community is that craftsmen are not willing to make the drive from the big city.

Gene and I laid marble floors on weekends.  It took us 4 months.  The marble is cool in the summer and warm in the winter.
Gene  remembered heated floors in a castle hotel in Austria. 
For him, it was a requirement. 





We cut heavy pre-cast cement pieces and installed 3 fireplaces.





Gene worked out the logistics of the curved stair finishes




The Rod Iron stair railings were verdigrised.





Our hall as it was photographed for Utah Homes & Gardens Magazine (Winter 2003)





We gilded and painted for months.



We found antique doors from Argentina.

We brought fixtures from our house in the city.






A few years later we added garages, greenhouse and guest cottage. 




And then we added the Barn 





And a Pergola to the west.





We planted a hundred trees to our house.





And we plant a large vegetable garden every year




Flowers and





Fruit from the garden






And we live happily in the middle of an Alfalfa Field






Yep, it all started with the Saddle, or was it the Fellini House?


Have a great Easter Sunday my dear
Blogging Friends

Gina