Tiny House Ontario

A Little Flooring

This is the entry way at Tiny House Ontario.  When I built the stairs with my husband last year I was in a terrible hurry, so I built a square box out of plywood and never bothered getting back to it.  Too many other things needed doing!

This year my husband and I removed it, custom fitted it from the door to the stairs and we got some flooring from Gananoque Home Hardware to put in there.  Nothing fancy!  .49 cents a sheet – 8 sheets cost $4.  plus tax.  The trim was $20… so the foyer was redone in an hour or two and cost about $25.  It wipes up easily too which is great.  While I hate to produce garbage, I don’t think of this as my forever floor, rather as something to protect the 5/8ths of plywood and the 2×10 base..  Still, even though it is not my forever floor, I would be happy if it lasted until all the landscaping and so forth is done.

I do have a plan for good floors to go in.  Matter of fact, I plan to use that big hickory tree that is dying at the front of my land as the floor for Tiny House Ontario, but I don’t want to mill this until it is totally dead.  I expect that the big hickory will do the whole house, easily, but I don’t want to put it in until the very last because I don’t want it to be damaged by the coming and going of construction.

The grubby cement floor and bamboo mat will have to do us this year, in the rest of the house.  Perhaps longer, since I want to hand hew those boards after they are quarter sawn at the local mill.

Anyone ever hand hew a hickory floor?

Categories: Environmentalism, Erazim Kohák, Materialism, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario | Leave a comment

Poor Baby

This is Baby.  She is the reason I am posting so much right now.  She made me go back to the grid.

Baby is the Tiny House Ontario steed, and my only wheels.  She gets me where I need to go – except for right now… Baby is sick…

I was coming home on her at 2:00 am from a community gathering and she just plain quit… right there in the middle of the road.  It was the second time that day… but this time I could not get her to start again.  Thankfully, I was rescued first time by my sister/friend Liisa and in the middle of the night by my cousin Kenny who (not only knows the land but he) knows how to be at the right place at the right time.

Baby is in the bike hospital right now and they cannot find the problem with her.  Something in her wiring; she runs for a bit and then stops cold.

Poor Baby.

Categories: Friendship, Off Grid, Tiny House Ontario, View | Leave a comment

Sooooo yummmmmmy!

 

 

 

I was totally craving coconut milk the other night and to my surprise I had both a can of it and a can opener.  No recipe book.  This is what I put together and I am going to share it now for two reasons.  Both because it is good and because I have a habit of not writing down my own inventions and then I forget….

Tiny House Ontario veggies and rice with coconut milk (total prep and cook time 30 minutes)

Turn the BBQ on high

In BBQ pan put a quarter cup of water

A teaspoon of salt and another of fresh ground pepper

In pan put (I used all Ontario Organic stuff – except the coconut milk… which does not grow here)

1 large cut up onion

2 big garlic cloves chopped up

1 small broccoli

2 sweet peppers

2 vine tomatoes

Put this pan in the BBQ and cook the veggies until they are semi cooked (asian style)

Add

1 can of coconut milk

2 cups of cooked rice

Stir in and check occasionally.  It becomes a little thicker and very bubbly at the side and this is when it is ready.

Taste for salt before serving.  I needed a little more, but I like salt.  A little fresh cilantro would dress this up for company but is not at all necessary because it is already great.

I hope you will try and that you enjoy this as much as I did!

 

 

 

Categories: Food, Off Grid, Time, Tiny House Ontario | Leave a comment

Rainy Day Coffee and Paint

Tiny House Ontario does not yet have a propane cooktop.  I know which one I want.  A two burner by Atwood.  It is not expensive or difficult to install.  It is also significantly more convenient and cheap to run than this rig as well as being more safe.

Seriously… cooking atop of a giraffe’s head with a butane torch while spitting out Toonies might be a better idea.  These little stoves are not very practical (even though this has been handy).  The problem is that I have not found a sink, or a fridge that I like (and can afford) and until I have these, I cannot decide where the propane cooktop goes in the kitchen counter top and I do not want a hole in it until I know where every little bit is going.

Still rain comes and I have no intention of standing there in the cold spring rain while my water slowly boils.  So the little camp cooker is the best I can do.

Who can complain when one has some really good coffee from Hatter’s Bay?

While I had my rainy day coffee – I put a base coat of (artist quality) paint on my mismatched cupboards.  Not really an improvement but still, the knobs work!

Too, I won a free decorating consultation from Kingston Paint and Decorating while at an event to raise funds for the Special Olympics, so perhaps I will have them come to look at the Tiny House cupboard colour?  I suspect that they may find this somewhat weird, but I know someone who works there – so she might pre-warn them!  Still, I love the little ladder that came with it and I am happy to support a small business.  Particularly those who support their community through donating to good causes!

Categories: Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Tiny House Ontario | 7 Comments

Somewhere Between Hard Knocks and Sloths

An old friend Steve, wrote to me a while ago and said, “no offence meant here, but Tiny House Ontario is practically a hotel when compared to a hunting camp”.  “Yes, this is the point”, was my answer.  I have thought a lot about what Steve said and you know, he is not the only one either who puts these questions to me.  My cousin Irene says that she wonders about me (she thinks I have gone mad).  She has said to me more than once, “I lived that life for many years and I don’t understand why you want to go back to that!”

It is not about giving up on myself like men do in a hunting camp.  It is also not about doing without, or making due, like it was for my cousin Irene.  I simply don’t have five children to take care of in a home with no conveniences – I really do not know how women survived those hard times!  I do not idealize these times.  I do however idealize the less consumeristic life that people lead before all this advertising mania took over our lives.

There is a point to Tiny House Ontario and there are also several lines that I am not comfortable crossing.   Still, the lines are fuzzy when it comes to the way that I live.  I found this year when I was moving in, that I was not worried at all about plumbing, running water, electricity, but I did worry about two things.  Firstly, I needed to get the in-house built because of the weirdo that I picked up on here and secondly, how would I paint without a studio?  Now I have a bathroom – but I have not yet painted – but this may be just an issue of being so busy!  Time will tell me.

The Tiny House objective is NOT to lead a hard life.  I don’t always intend to live with no heat, plumbing, water, lights… so why do it now?   It is hard to explain even to myself, what I am trying to do.

Here is what I mean, with water as an example.

It is great to have running water and taps.  I get that!  Really I do!  Turn the tap or flush the toilet and presto snapo, there it is to take care of your needs.  Why would I want to give that up?  I mean, we need to have water to live.  We drink, cook, and wash up after cooking with it; we also need it for personal bathing, and cleaning house.  All of these needs are equally important for normal living (not for survival).  Why would I want to live without water?  I cannot live without water but I can, I found, easily live without running water.  Simply put, until I have a well installed, I have do my own running for water.  Fortunately, I have multiple sources of water within walking (or short driving) distance.  I have a few jugs that I can carry from my friend’s homes without having a vehicle to get them.  I have found that I can comfortably live with about 10 litres of water a day.  It is not difficult or even a hardship to plan through this requirement.  Still, if I did not have friends or family there, even this would become impossible, so I am grateful to them for allowing me to be a sponge (BAHAHAHA).

Along with cooking and cleaning with this 10 litres of water, I sponge bathe daily, wash my hair every third day, but even so, I need to shower weekly.  Thankfully, Liisa allows me to do this at her house, still, I think that the rain water shower will be great once it is fully hooked up.  I think, that with this connected that I will be able to reduce my dependence on gasoline because I drive to and from Liisa’s home for my weekly wash up.  Laundry, I bring to town – I do not pull out the scrub board much.

I guess, what I am saying is that my objective is not to live in a hunting camp.  I like things nice and I do also like to bathe and keep my hair looking fresh.  Tiny House Ontario is not about living a life of total hardship (or isolation).  I will in fact, put in a well with a hand pump as soon as money allows me to do this with cash.  My objective is to have a property without having a mortgage on it.  I don’t want any more debt than the mortgage on my Hamilton home (OK… I don’t want that either – but you know what I mean.  I hope.).

My objective is to build the most comfortable and ecologically sustainable life that I can with the least amount of money.  It is not an exercise in hardship.  It is an exercise in self sustainability and kinship with those around me.  As time and money dictate improvements will come.  A little at a time.  Tiny House Ontario is a work in progress.  I am not sweating the things that I could use there.  Still, if you know anyone who digs wells, donates solar arrays,  donates and installs septic systems, donates and puts on siding, has a tiny 12 watt fridge or a two burner interior propane cooker… all for free… let me know.  I am happy to bring on the conveniences.

Just because it is Tiny… does not mean that it is all free – but it also does not mean that it has to be awful either.   If only I had a money tree…

Really, honestly, I am totally happy with the model below.  A few cents at a time and with this, I grow a beautiful green life

Categories: Environmentalism, Forest, Friendship, Materialism, Money, Off Grid, Ontario, Simple living, Stuff, Tiny House Ontario | Leave a comment