Author Archives: Laura

Unknown's avatar

About Laura

Laura is an Artist who lives in Guelph Ontario. She is interested in societal equality, beauty, architecture, philosophy, feminism, people watching, dogs, animal rescue, ecology, as well as the generational ties between people. Laura has always been interested in peace and because she loves animals she is vegan. https://www.instagram.com/atelieroflauraleemoreland/ https://www.facebook.com/AtelierofLauraLeeMoreland https://atelieroflauraleemoreland.com

Going Up The Country

Update: Not five minutes ago I posted this and turned off my computer, HJ bent over to pick up the dog and can’t stand up… something in his lower back… So, I won’t be leaving tonight after all… just sitting here listening to Canned Heat and Hj whining…  He will not (of course) go to Emerg.  Men!

We are leaving Hamilton now.  It is nearly 3 hours later than we expected to go… Hope the traffic is totally clear.  If it is we should be there by 1:00 am or even a bit earlier.

Keep your wheels on the road, that is the plan.

See you soon Tiny House!

xo L

Categories: Forest, Music, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Time, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: | 4 Comments

Cloth Porch Adaptive

I am facing the awful Toronto traffic again this evening to head back to Tiny House Ontario.  I started a project last weekend and I am going to finish it up this weekend.

Project is: I decided to cover the cloth porch roof, 2×8 boards, 17 of them butting each other in order to keep the snow out in winter and rain out in summer.  I have a huge green tarp which I will use to cover the porch. I think it will be large enough to cover the top and two of the sides.  The other side I will close up with another small white tarp because this will allow some light in.

I think the cloth porch will be a good makeshift shed to bring in items for winter such as the bike, the BBQ and wheelbarrow.   It should also serve as a good spot to put a small wood stove and some wood too.  If I find a Tiny wood stove (cheap) and figure out how to hook it up safely.  My cousin Sandy, who is an outdoorsman says that there are Tiny stoves designed to heat a tent and this should work to heat up the porch and house too.  I was thinking that a few bales of straw would probably help to shelter it a little more as well, but of course then I would have the problem about what to do with these afterward, so I think I will just tarp it up and hope for the best.

A stove will mean poking a hole in the cloth.  I am okay with this because the front cloth is on its last legs now.  It has many small holes in it and some big ones too that I sewed up.  I already got replacement cloth for the porch when it when the $2.metre sale was on in the spring, so when the tarp comes off the new cloth can go up.

I understand that by covering the roof on the South side of the house that I will be giving up a lot of light in the house; however, if this goes well, it will mean that THO will be used a lot more this winter.  Keeping warm is more essential than light, particularly now that I have the 12v system.

I have to add, that the hilarity of how this will look is not lost on me… tarp room with a wood stove, BBQ, motorbike, makeshift kitchen, garden tools, and woodpile attached to the house, sounds like the epiphany of red-neck additions.  Seems like a great place to stop by with the sleds and drink out of a wineskin.  It is making my rural heart sing!

Categories: Cloth Porch, Family, Friendship, Magical, Off Grid, Ontario, Tiny House Ontario | 1 Comment

Dusk

At the end of the day when dusk comes the dogs are brought out for the last potty trip.  I like the way that Tiny House Ontario looks in the semi darkness now, with its LED lights on, shining through the windows.  Like the paintings of simpler times in cozy little houses, not too different from my own.

I can’t help but be reminded of a section from the the new Tiny House Magazine that Kent Griswold has put out.  If you have an iPad you can download a free first edition preview copy until October 31 here.  Unfortunately, this is only available electronically for the iPad.   The discussion that I found most interesting is about how the McMansions that are all going up now are a fad that will not last because of the sheer magnificent cost of upkeep.

Through history, you know, everyone except the ~1% rich lived in small homes.  Tiny Homes are not new thing.  My friend Donna who is from Jamaica, says that “people all over the world have been living happily in Tiny homes for hundreds and thousands of years”.  Space is not a luxury, rather it is the great burden of our time. So much TIME goes into paying for it, filling it, cleaning it,  fixing it, decorating it and then starting over again and again.  We give away our lives one short increment of time after another… just to keeping up those big homes instead of doing what we want with our lives.  The cycle of it is quite out of balance.  One cannot ever get that time back, not ever.

For me, the space in THO is perfect but when my husband stays I have found it too small.  He is a big fellow; about 6 feet tall and close to 250 pounds.  Hj simply fills the house.  We bump into one another, he is always in my way.  I am of the opinion that another square foot in width would have been better for us as a couple – 12 square feet more (in total) would make this house far more livable.   I am a bit envious of the people who are allowed 120 square feet, for us the interior 97.75 is it. Another Tiny room would be really great!  Still, we have the space that we are allowed, so I gave it a lot of thought and found a simple solution to this and it feels so much more spacious.  Remove the table and chairs.  This opened things up a lot.  Admittedly, one chair still has to be moved back to Hamilton so we will have to wait and see the full result of this.  In place of those items came Vernie’s ingenious little table that is sofa height and this makes a huge difference in the openness of the place already.  It allowed us to gain back ~10 square feet of open space.  Once the last chair goes, we will have about a 35 square feet rectangular open space to move around in.  I think one can easily waltz on a 5×7 bamboo area rug.  More accurately I think we can waltz around one another so that we do not invade one another’s natural space.

Another space saving item that I have planned is a breadboard in the kitchen.  These are an old idea coming from a time when homes were more appropriately sized and still useful in the context of the Tiny House.  When this is installed it will help with the livability because it will add another ~3 square feet of counter space when I need it.  Still I have to wait for this until I get the sink, stove and fridge in because I want to be sure what I notch in is correctly located.

Alas, dusk is falling early which means that the days are getting colder and the nights are getting nearly bitter.  All the planning will have to wait for another  year because now we must soon prepare THO for winter and tuck ourselves safely away in the heated house in Hamilton.  Not really the best of both worlds as one might imagine – but rather, I wish that THO was finished and I could live there permanently.

Heat and water, heat and water, heat and water… So close and yet, so far… sigh…

Categories: Building code, Environmentalism, Family, Materialism, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Stuff, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: , | 7 Comments

Harvest Waste

This year was such a terrible growing year owing to the drought that gripped our area along with so many others.  Now the frost warnings have now started in this region so the food that was growing had to be harvested and brought in.  I have picked off all the peppers, squash, tomatoes and cut down the basil and swiss chard.  I got bags of food even though the season was not great owing I believe to the late rains.  Oddly, the melons did not produce a single fruit, but now… too late, the plants have loads of small round beginnings.  I guess if the frost does not hit then perhaps I will get something of them in the Indian Summer.  The food is now in Hamilton with me, all safely hand processed and tucked away in my root cellar and freezer.  Tonight I am going to caramelize the immature squash and onion then throw in some green tomatoes and stir this into some buckwheat pasta for supper.  Use up what did not mature.  Should be sweet and sour and hopefully interesting.

Between the rounds of cooking that went on yesterday I caught up on a lot of reading and news.  Among the items that I found interesting was a blog out of Tennessee called Dreaming Smaller in which a young man who has had a  catastrophic injury shares his plans and concerns about downsizing their home (for he and his family).  The land is where his family home, long ago burned out was situated.   In the long grass there hides a copperhead snake nesting site, so you never know when one of them will wiggle out of the grass and bite… These bites hurt a lot, he assures, but are rarely fatal… (!!!)  With this said, I know I am not the only Canadian who finds the idea of living near a poison snake pretty darn scary.  On a chance cafe meeting a young Australian tourist told me “Canadians have a weird national obsessive fear of poison snakes, every single one of you asks about them.”  With this in mind, I thought you might also like to check his site out.

Among the usual tragic news of accidents and shootings, the news out of Canada that I find most shocking and disgusting is the story of the “Peas Garden“.  This small garden was started on May 1, 2012 in Queen’s Park and maintained in all summer by about a hundred volunteers.  The food was intended for low income persons and the community was to have a harvesting party on September 29th, but on the eve of the harvest, the City Parks Director Richard Ubbens sent City Employees to rip it up and sod it over.  This was done without warning the group.  The food was all destroyed, the heirloom plants plucked.  The opportunity for food bank users to have this healthy locally grown food was callously removed.  This in a year which anyone connected to growing food will know was not ideal.  This in a time when food banks cannot keep up, this story really sickens me!  There is nothing, and I mean nothing that enrages me more than wastefulness and mean spiritedness toward the disadvantaged.

Food for thought… When did Canada get so turned upside down?

Categories: Drought, Environmentalism, Food, Forest, Ontario, Open your eyes, Rules, View | 3 Comments

Still

I love these fall mornings.  It is cozy inside, under the blankets.  The warm orange leaves and filtered sun give the feeling of being in a safe cocoon.  This year, the eyes are tricked into believing that everything is a back-lit brown… the mix of orange and green is perfect.

When I wake up on mornings like this, I strongly desire to lay there looking out the window listening to the sound of my own breath.  Quiet in the still of this place.

Today, my husband was there to bring the dogs down and kindly, he brought me the camera.  So I broke my quiet, took out the screen and now I share the THO bedroom view with you.

Categories: Environmentalism, Forest, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Open your eyes, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: , , , | 4 Comments