Tiny house

Great Uncle Frank’s Tiny House

I went to Tiny House Ontario over the weekend and drove in to see my grandma Violet Rickards.  Grandma is approaching 90 and recently, feeling slowed down and tired.  On the route in, I took Rideau Street, ironically, where grandma’s brother, Frank Compton (Punky) lived in his Tiny House when I was a young girl.  Great Uncle Frank worked on the big ships and due to this work, he grew accustomed to small spaces and when he finally hit land he never changed that way of living.  He bought a Tiny House and lived there until the end of his life.

When I was young, I loved to visit Great Uncle Frank.  He allowed me to open the cupboards and look around.  Not only that, he encouraged me to explore.  He would say “there is a treat somewhere, and you will have to find it”.   Or, go lift up the latch in the closet and see what is down in the cellar.  In retrospect I suppose that this allowed him to have a grown up visit at his Tiny House, but when I was a kid, I did not see it like that.  What I saw was that I was allowed to to exactly what I wanted to do when I visited him.

This Tiny House at 371 Rideau Street in Kingston Ontario, sits empty.  It was never what one would call a fancy house but all a single person needs to live comfortably.  It had a quirky but functional bathroom, a decent sized kitchen, a small bedroom with a closet (where the basement entry latch was in the floor), and a little sitting room too.  The coolest thing about this tiny house is that it also has a really good sized shed and a back yard that is a great size and which overlooks the Rideau Canal, he kept his horse there.  It is a great, conveniently located, spot except that the street is somewhat busy and there is an industrial welder who is housed across.   Still, it sickens me to see this Tiny House sit empty in a world where so many people are homeless.  No reason why this could not be tidied up again and made into a house that someone could call home.  When I was a young single mom, I would have loved to have had this tiny house to live in, still would!

Today, when kids in the neighbourhood of Tiny House Ontario come to visit, and they do come… I do just as Great Uncle Frank did.  I tell them to look around, open things up, go upstairs and see what I have done up there.  I encourage them to look for hidden treats and also to tell me about themselves.  I very rarely have grown ups there when they come, so I don’t really care about adult conversations, and maybe Great Uncle Frank did not either.  Perhaps, just perhaps, it is just as it should be and he was truly Great Uncle Frank, just as he was called.  

Categories: Building code, Materialism, Rules, Stuff, Sustainable living, Tiny house | 1 Comment

Warm bed, in Canada’s cold

It was minus 3 at Tiny House Ontario for the two days that I was there.  A small propane heater brought the temperature up to the place where you could not see your breath, not exactly winter camping but mighty close.  Still, I had known this before I went and packed a lot of bedding.  Up in the loft I used 2 blankets, 2 comforters, and a fun fur covered (non-animal) duvet.  I also slept in fleece with long underwear.  Sexy eh?

This was cozy and though I could see my breath in the morning again when I woke up, I slept well and the bedroom is really cozy.  Here is what it looks like there.

Categories: Original Art work of Laura Moreland, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario, Winter | 2 Comments

Low afternoon sun

I have just arrived home now from two nights at Tiny House Ontario.  Honestly, I don’t know how the Inuit people can stand the cold!.  The temperature hovered at around -3 degrees… I am exhausted!

These two photos are taken in sequence from inside and then from outside.  The first out the South West window, the second is the sky from the tiny house taken facing to the South West.  They are nearly the same image, if you take the time to look.

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Painted Window

When I am alone at Tiny House Ontario I look out this window.  It is not always possible to see out it, because it is often times fogged up.  Even though I can’t see out, it is still one of my favourite things to look to.

If I put an addition on Tiny House Ontario, then this will become a doorway, but I think I will put this window right in again in my bathroom or kitchen.

Such a simple creative piece, but it must stay.

Categories: Art, Forest, Off Grid, Ontario, Open your eyes, Original Art work of Laura Moreland, Tiny House Ontario | 3 Comments

To the woods

Dear Readers,

It is snowing now here in Ontario and today, in a moment, I leave for Tiny House Ontario.  I am not sure how long I will stay, because I don’t have any heat there except a little stinky camping propane heater and about 30 bees wax candles.  I am not convinced that my tiny herd, of tiny dogs, will like the Tiny House, with only the tiniest bit of heat.

So, this is a heads up.  I will not be posting while I am there because if you have been reading you know I am as off grid as one can be.  I hope to be there the 10 nights which is what I am aiming for, but it may only be 2 depending on the dogs.

Even so, I will come back armed with more photos of the place.  There will be, I hope, some good and updated visuals when I return.  In the mean time, I leave you with one of my paintings.

Stay safe, keep reading and planning!

Laura

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