Forest

Big Treats at Tiny House…

Tiny House Ontario sits quite some distance from the road, so I was not really sure if we would get any trick or treaters at the house.   Six little people braved the long road in, dressed up in their scary gear.  So I am happy that we packed up twelve big vegan treat bags, pop, chips, pencils, raspberry candy, and Rockets.  We also picked up craisins, and Monsters Inc. PEZ dispensers for our niece Violet, and our neighbours Morgan and Cooper so that they would have a little something extra from us.

We will bring other treat bags home and give them to the four little neighbour children who live in our block in Hamilton.  Two are still up for grabs!

THO really likes having Halloween!  Well, truthfully, Laura likes any opportunity to see kids.

Don't be scared!  This is really our niece Violet and she is not the least bit dangerous!

Don’t be scared! This is really our niece Violet and she is not the least bit dangerous!

 

Categories: Family, Forest, Friendship, Neighbours, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario | Tags: , | 2 Comments

Puzzling

Have you ever looked at a person and wonder how they manage to survive?  You know what I mean?  The type that is hard on their body and who does nothing right, no good food, too much partying or whatever. The ones who look like they don’t respect the life they have, in fact they punish themselves with all the vices they can dream up.  But as you watch them live to be a ripe old age despite never having eaten a salad in their life, it becomes clear that survival is sometimes not a matter of good planning, it is sometimes – dare I say, most cases – just good luck.

Clyde the tree is sort of like this.  He is rotting, he is leaning ~15 – 45 degrees and the ground where his roots hold is shallow.  Storm after storm, year after year, I wonder if this will be the one that shakes him from the earth where he was once just a little seed.  He goes on.  Even through last year’s horrible drought and into this year he lives.  Each spring, I have assumed that this would be the year where he does not sprout a leaf, but somehow he manages to get the sap flowing and go on living for another set of seasons.

This year despite his increased lean of about 5 degrees, it is the first where I think he will sprout again next year just as long as his roots don’t tip out of the ground.  Survival is so fragile, even for tough guys like Clyde and tough women like me.

DSCF5323

I guess Clyde and I both have our roots here, holding us firm.  I hope this little plot of land continues to sustain us.

Categories: Forest, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | Tags: , , | 5 Comments

Walking and Falling

The view from my loft is certainly changing.  The canopy is moving into its final stage before falling.

Photographing from inside the loft to outside, the photo does not capture how bright and orange it is out there.  But it does show that there is change.

Photographing from inside the loft to outside, the photo does not capture how bright and orange it is out there. But it does show that there is change.

Out on a walk I found some interesting species of mushrooms growing all over one of the living but old and gnarled trees.  Another thing now to make this trees one of my favourites.  It is always an interesting one!

Anyone know what variety these are and are the edible?

Anyone know what variety these are and are the edible?

The farm that is part of the original 50 acres, of which my land is a part, took off its soybeans.  The field lay nearly empty now showing itself like skin below a freshly shaved head.

The shaved field of my fore family

I have never been on a farm that produced soy before.  What was surprising to me is that so many beans are left behind by the harvesting machines.  In about a square foot of this field I was able to pick up this many beans.

Can you believe the waste?

Can you believe the waste?

I could not have imagined that so many would simply lay in the field.  Is this now seeded for the following year?  Or food for the turkeys, deer, squirrels and and migrating birds?  I wish I knew more about this.

Categories: Environmentalism, Food, Forest, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | 5 Comments

Changing Flowers

In early September I took a photo of some flowers that were blooming along the edge of the fence at the tiny house.

Carrie's flowers

Tiny House and Porch – The house has a relatively HUGE cloth porch, the perfect place to sit outside but be free of biting insects that are plentiful in the Ontario forest.

When I arrived back four weeks later, on the last day of the month I found that it was fall in the area.  I also found that finally my dahlia had bloomed.  The flower is so huge that the plant could not hold it up, so I posed it for the photo.

Yellow dahlia

The sunflowers were eaten quite some time ago by the little garden thieves but one sole teddybear variety did not become a midnight snack.  I was surprised to find it there, hanging like those in J.E.H MacDonald’s  “the Tangled Garden”. It might be fun to paint this one.  The natural world is alive with change.

THO Tangled Garden

Categories: Forest, Magical, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | 4 Comments

Another Angle

A while ago one of my readers asked me why I don’t show other angles of Tiny House Ontario.  The reason is much more simple than you might think.  Just five feet in front of the house begins a thorn bramble.  It runs due East to West and makes stepping far enough away from the house to get a photo sort of tricky.

The bramble is dense.  when I stand on the other side of it in the clearest area about 30 feet from the house, after half of the leaves have fallen this what you can see of the house.   Can you see it???Tiny House Ontario from the South

Categories: Forest, Nature, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, View | 13 Comments