March has glided into the Oregon bringing plum blossoms, morels and humming pollinators.
Sarah is working happily away with Sum Of Us, and I’ve been working on the land here gardening, building ‘A’ frames for a green house, and re-roofing the cabin we’re living in while we finish the Tiny House. It literally blew off in a huge storm that rolled through. This required peeling it off, scooping out the rotten old fiber-glass insulation (worst part…most def.), replacing and sistering in rafters, re-sheathing and putting on standing seam metal roofing and flashing a chimney. While it took longer than I thought it would, it didn’t take long at all…and the next metal roof that I do will be even better.
The good news is the tiny house is bone dry. That storm didn’t even come close! WOOT! While we were gone, there were some woodpeckers that made a home in the house, but then a ring-tailed cat moved in and took care of that problem! I evicted them plus a few wasps with a little sage smoke and we’re off to the races.
I feel like I’m continually finding ways that the house ‘could be better’ if only x-y-z, but at the same time I’m charmed by the little mistakes. I have even started laughing (lovingly) at ‘Past-Joseph’ when ‘Present-Joseph’, who has excellent hind-sight, comes upon something that his predecessor did that made the next step SO much more difficult.
The ridge cap is a perfect example of this. I know what the roofing directions told me to do, but the stock ridge cap that came with the roofing material was too small for our massive ridge beam and I just HAD to do it my way *eye-roll*. So I made a bigger ridge cap out of the metal sheeting, bent the edges a few times to mimic the original cap thinking the “z” channeling that we put on for ventilation would snug into it nicely.


This was dramatically foiled as I precariously tried putting a 25′ long 65 lbs piece of steel on in one long ‘home run’ and, after dropping it twice, hollered for Sarah to come up and help. She did, we got it on, but the piece was bent all over the place, and it was foolish to think that I could make a machine-straight bend in a piece of metal with only hand tools, then put it on while precariously straddling the roof.
Well, we’ve come this far!
I move forward knowing that this self here IS the past self, and will have to contend with/fix/accept the choices I make again and again as the learning curve winds on. It’s always a funny feeling to be SO SURE of what I’m doing, knowing full well that there will be something that humbles me coming down the pipe. There WILL be some part of the task that is unexpected, it’s never what I think it will be. After all, ‘these are the stones on which we choose to whet the keen edge of our spirit.’*
Next week I’ll start running electrical, and now that we’re a little more settled in this life, be more diligent about updating the blog. Thanks for reading!
Parting shots!



Ahhhh spring.
Great update, Joseph!
Whatever “sistering in the rafters” means — its a great phrase!
“…these are the stones on which we choose to whet the keen edge of our spirit” — I appreciate that quite a bit — who was it who said that?
I laughed out loud at Coop as Rodolfo!
Thanks so much Steve! Sistering rafters means putting a new one next to an old one at the weak points and attaching the whole thing together to make it strong.
Richard Bach, (a former Little Applegate resident) wrote that.
Hi Joseph and Sarah, The picture of the Youngstown carpenter work gloves was really evocative! I think a watercolor rendering of them is in order! Love, Linda
Thanks Linda! They are great gloves, but these have seen better days. I just got a new pair in the mail a few days ago! May the entropy begin!
It’s great to see this all coming along and hearing about how you’ve changed and grown through the process. My jealously is as tall as the mountains LDW climbs.
All the best from STL – moons family
Thanks for your support and encouragement the whole way through D! Have a great Passover! Wish we could be there!
Doing some great work out there Joseph ! Lots to be proud of in your quest and journey of completing your Little House In The Wherever I Want To Go ! Wonderful life you are living and what a life experience you are enjoying. Can’t wait for the book to be written ! Miss you and hope to see you on your next visit to New York, Carpe diem ! Gerry
Thanks so much Gerry! Yes, let’s get together when next I’m in New York