Open your eyes

Home Sweet Home

It was wonderful to get back to Tiny House Ontario even though it was just a Friday to Monday trip.  The weather was perfect!  I am very comfortable here in Hamilton in my small house, which has lots of light and a wonderful small studio for me to paint in; evenso, my home is Tiny House Ontario.  This is not just because I love it there, but it is a place where people know my name.  Mostly everyone.

My husband was also down with me and we brought the dogs out for a few walks while we were there.  Unfortunately Honey got a tick and since that particular area of Ontario is awful for Lyme disease… we have to keep our eyes on her.

On one of the walks we went to the bottom of our escarpment and I found a wonderful old tree which made me think about how simple places can be and still be home.  This single tree, rotting and twisted is the home to so many creatures.  Additionally in the top there is a little nest.

Tree House Condo?

Categories: Environmentalism, Erazim Kohák, Forest, Nature, Ontario, Open your eyes, Tiny House Ontario | Leave a comment

Flat Escarpment

I would never have known how difficult it is to photograph an escarpment until I began taking photos of mine.  The height is lost in photos.  The slope too.  The images are always flat and small.  Sigh…

Despite the disappointing images that I got, I am posting three of the best photos that are taken from my spring visit on March 18th so that you can see it (sort of) from the bottom, top and middle.

Categories: Forest, Nature, Ontario, Open your eyes, Tiny House Ontario, View | Leave a comment

“Buck-Buck” Said The Chicken

As you know, I am not at Tiny House Ontario at the moment.  I am simply in limbo waiting, waiting, waiting for the thaw to come.  When the days come up above 12 consistently, I will go.

These days, I fill the hours with painting, reading and writing. Since the new year I have read quite a bit, but for the most part I am concentrating on the life works of the painter/writer Emily Carr.  Today, I read the story about her beloved pet rooster Lorum.  Emily was not the only one who kept pet poultry when she was a child.  I also did.

The chicken came to me when my father’s twin brother Bob saw a cage fall off of a truck load of chickens who were bound for market.

I was about six years old when he came carrying the poor pathetic thing in it’s banged up cage, over to the barn.  He told my dad that the poor chicken had fallen hollering and she was still hollering.  Dad said to put the hen in the old hen house and he told me to get some grain and water for the creature.  It was the first chicken that had been there in my life because my family did not keep chickens for many years.  The lovely red chicken coop was simply used as a play house for me.  I loved to swing on the roosts.

I followed uncle Bob out with a scoop of grain.  I was too small to carry both still, and I was also quite keen to see the chicken arrive in it’s new home.  Uncle Bob set it on the ground and said, “well, I guess this is your chicken now”.  I was very happy about this.  I liked her round gold eyes and the way she looked at me and tilted her head.  I liked her red cone and her shiny feathers.  Uncle Bob fiddled with the cage while I talked to the chicken.  I asked “what is your name little chicken?”  “Buck-Buck” said the chicken.

Buck-Buck was an ordinary white hen, probably a Bantam.  She was scrawny and rather beaten up looking from her terrible fall from the truck.  But right from the beginning that funny little chicken did not want to leave my side.  Everywhere I went, that chicken followed me like a dog.  I already had a dog, named Doc, and an orange cat, named Marmalade who followed me.  Another fan, who just so happened to be a chicken did not feel funny to me at all.  I was simply accustomed to the company of animals.

Girl, dog, cat, chicken.  Sometimes I would lead; sometimes I would follow.  We were always together.  Except, Buck-Buck was not allowed in the house.  EVER!

My mother did not like Buck-Buck and did not call her by her name, she preferred to call her “that God-damned lousy chicken”.  Still I managed to sneak Buck-Buck, and her lice, into the house from time to time.  I would dress that poor chicken in doll clothes, just like I did with my cat and the barn cats too.  I would never be able to keep Buck-Buck in for long.  I would get caught eventually, because but I was small and I would sometimes forget, or Buck-Buck would say her name just a little too loudly and mom would start hollering.  When I got caught, the trio and I would run out of the house to hide from Mom’s wrath, and we would be off on another adventure.

At night, unless I was very sneaky and got Buck Buck in bed with me, I always had to lock her into the chicken house before dark.  One night I forgot to do it.  I had been having a sleepover next door at my Grandma and Grandpa’s house which was always lots of fun.  They always had treats, they paid a lot of attention to me, and spoiled me with their great love.  In the morning as soon as I thought of it, I went out looking for old Buck-Buck who was doing a pretty good job at hide-and-go-seek.  I called and called the chicken but she would not come out of her hiding spot.

I looked and looked.  I ran out into the fields with Doc and Marmalade, we all called Buck-Buck but she never came and she did not answer either.  We went a way back into the corn field and Doc led me to a small pile of shiny white feathers.

I ran back to the farm house and told my grandparents, who explained to me that Buck-Buck had probably been eaten by a fox.

Poor Buck-Buck, I said, and I cried for that poor little chicken because I loved her.  Someday I will meet her at the rainbow bridge and together again we will be.

Categories: Emily Carr, Open your eyes, Simple living, Time, Writing | 1 Comment

The Beatles Tiny House Recording

I found a Tiny House, obscure Beatles recording from 1969 (now removed from You Tube sorry folks!).  It is hard to make out the beginning few seconds but you can read along at 0.34.

Sounds like they are having a GREAT TIME with Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen by the Sea, by Al Hoffman and Dick Manning.  The Beatles would have been working on Abbey Road.  I understand that they were having a tough time as a band during that period but, even so this Tiny House song seems to have brought them some much needed distraction.

I wish I could say that it was written for me, but I was only 4 when this recording was done.

Here are the lyrics:

There’s a tiny house

By a tiny stream

Where a lovely lass

Had a lovely dream

And her dream came true

Quite unexpectedly

In Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen By The Sea

Categories: Art, Open your eyes, Simple living, Stuff, The Beatles, Tiny House Ontario | 1 Comment

The Trees: Speaking to the Issue

My friend Colleen and I were chatting this morning, as we do from time to time.  Our chats are filled with banter about animal ethics, environmental issues, and we also very often speak about the problematic ways in which human beings behave.  There is often an emphasis on sheeplism and our frustrations in dealing with this.

During our banter, she mentioned a song called The Trees which is both written and performed by the iconic Canadian rock band Rush.  Since I have always been about as far away from the mainstream as possible, I had never heard this song.  My loss.  It is really great; meaningful on a lot of levels.

The way that this song connected to something that has been on my mind for the last bit was timely.  For the last few days I have been thinking a lot about the rules.  Not the dating book series, but the rules of society.  These rules, while put in place for the good of the whole, lost sight of a lot of things that are perfectly sensible.  Specifically, I am speaking about Tiny Houses and the Bylaws that prohibit people from making choices that are better for the land, environment, mental health and in a million and one ways are greater than any McMansion can ever possibly be.

I have for three days had the story on my mind about the fellow who bought some acres in the US and whose neighbour harassed him from the day that he moved there.  The story* messed up on so many levels, sort of Deliverance meets the Tiny House movement.  The post is interesting but here is my synopsis of it this Deliverance story, the blogger bought land and put a tiny house on it.  He hoped to live there for two years but made it only 5 months, in the time that he lived there he was constantly harassed and subjected to all sort of crazy from a weirdo next door (my words, not his).

The question is, who would you rather have for a neighbour?  A quiet person whose house is so small that you can’t see it and who leaves the land as natural as it was when the planet formed, or a lout who blares his music, lets his kid, big scary dogs and insanity into your life every day just because you happen to live next door?  You guessed it, the lout called the government and they are making him remove his Tiny House from his land.  It seems wrong that an innocuous Tiny House can be considered wrong in anyone’s mind.

I am of the opinion that the legality of Tiny Houses should not be questioned.  This should not be an issue.  If indeed laws are put in place to protect people then who exactly is this law protecting?  Why would anyone think that a Tiny House is dangerous?

Is this because refusing to participate in a consumer lifestyle is not acceptable and therefore a crime?

Here are the wonderful lyrics to the song that I think speaks to this issue.

“The Trees”

There is unrest in the forest
There is trouble with the trees
For the maples want more sunlight
And the oaks ignore their pleas
The trouble with the maples
(And they’re quite convinced they’re right)
They say the oaks are just too lofty
And they grab up all the light
But the oaks can’t help their feelings
If they like the way they’re made
And they wonder why the maples
Can’t be happy in their shade
There is trouble in the forest
And the creatures all have fled
As the maples scream ‘Oppression!’
And the oaks just shake their heads
So the maples formed a union
And demanded equal rights
‘The oaks are just too greedy
We will make them give us light’
Now there’s no more oak oppression
For they passed a noble law
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe and saw
.
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Categories: Art, Environmentalism, Forest, Materialism, Money, Off Grid, Ontario, Open your eyes, Sustainable living, Tiny House Ontario | Tags: , , , | 10 Comments