Farm Progress!

It’s been a month since I updated you about the status of our move to the farm, and if you missed the last post regarding our plan you can check that out here.

It’s been a typical cold and wet spring here in Iowa, which has delayed a few things for our move (including the septic system), but we have made quite a bit of progress. Here are a few photos.

We are definitely ready to live up at the farm full time, and while progress seems slow it really is moving along pretty quickly considering Adam only has one day a week to devote to working on our things.

In the meantime, I continue to gather materials for the critter cottage, which you might remember will be the future home to our dogs and chickens. If you are local and have extra fencing you want to get rid of, let me know!

Well I had better get back to emails, it’s a little too cold to work outside today. Cheers to a warm weather forecast for the rest of the week!

-Rachael

OUR New Home Design & Farm Update

Good morning from a rather warm day for February in Iowa! This time of year, just about anything is possible with the weather. Will it be a -60 degree ‘polar vortex’ day? Or a 50 degree day, prompting some of the life-long Iowans to bring out their shorts? We just never know.

Looking ahead to future projects helps get me through these cold winter months, and today I am sharing the plans for our personal home that we plan to get started on toward the end of this year, and where we will be living in the interim!

As you probably know, we have been living in a college apartment since we sold our home in April, and while it’s a functional space it’s also teaching us a lot about how to live minimally (and that we have to pick up everything every night or risk tripping over it in the morning!) Our farm has an enormous machine shed (originally for farm equipment) that we will be taking a portion of and converting into a guest cottage, and we will also live in this space while we build our home.

We already had planned to put in a large canning kitchen and extra bathroom as well as an office in the machine shed, so we are just tweaking those plans a bit and doing that project first. This way we can live on our property, have all of our stuff in one place, and work on our home as we have time. When our house is done, this guest cottage will work great for extra storage, visitors, large cooking operations, etc. We recently got to work on the guest cottage, as you can see below….hello there in-floor heat!

In-floor heat install day

Framing begins!

Next up after the guest cottage is the new & improved ‘Critter Cottage’ as I am calling it. It’s a small, 12x20ish building that will have our dogs on one side and our chickens & guinea fowl on the other side. Obviously we will have to separate the bird hunting dogs from the birds to ensure there are no mishaps, so each side will have their own entrance/exits. The dogs are currently in a similar sized building on the property (with their own fenced area attached) but that building needs to come down as it’s not insulated well and doesn’t have electricity, and in general is less than ideal.

Original ‘critter cottage’. New building will be directly in front of this one.

Stage #3 of building at the farm includes our house and gardens, which are obviously the most expensive and time consuming projects. For these reasons we have been extensively planning, creating drawings, consulting, etc and I think we finally have settled on what we want. It’s been a long road, but here are some of the preliminary images.

The entirety of our plans for the farm are more of a 5 year process, and the order in which items get accomplished will probably vary a bit due to a variety of reasons. But regardless, each hour of work we accomplish is moving us toward our goal, and I cannot wait to see what has transpired even one year from now!

It feels good to have a plan, even if it’s a really long and complicated one! :)

We’ll chat again soon, for now try and hold out the rest of this winter…Spring is ALMOST here!

Cheers,

Rachael

The Final Porch Photo

It’s been about a week since we visited our home for the last time, picked up the final items, and took one last photo on the front porch.

The last porch pic!

The last porch pic!

It’s been a bittersweet experience, leaving the first home we built together from the ground up, our child’s first home, our beloved dog Mia’s last home.

We are excited to move on to our acreage and spread out…to watch the summer sunset’s with sweet tea and fireflies…to chase chickens, play in the creek, and enjoy the wildlife. I mean, first we have to build a house out there, but we will get started on that soon.

Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.

We have plenty of exciting projects this summer, and I can’t wait to start sharing them with you. Now that we have a bit more time (and aren’t in the middle of moving) I will be catching up.

We’ll chat soon!

-Rachael

It's Finally Happening!

It’s been over two years in the making…

…and after looking at countless properties and writing offers and being super frustrated, we finally found a piece of property for our forever homestead.

Y’all, it’s FINALLY HAPPENING!

Finally a place to raise our child in the great outdoors.

A place to raise chickens and have a huge garden.

A place to store all of our trailers and construction equipment indoors and out of the Iowa elements.

We will have to build a new home, and it will sit roughly where this shed is pictured in the photo below…

IMG_7738.jpg

I can’t wait to sit here in the evening and watch the sunset over the crops from my back deck! Maybe this time next year we can make that happen.

There are a few other buildings on the property, one is a huge morton building which will store all of our trailers and equipment. We also will have a couple grain bin’s, and Adam already has a plan to turn one of them into an outdoor kitchen (?)

It doesn’t get much more ‘Iowa’ than an acreage with grain bins and a view of row crops!

So what’s next for us?

For now we aren’t going anywhere. We need to sell our house and build a new one on this property, which we don’t close on until October. Since there isn’t much work that can be completed during the winter months in Iowa, we will most likely be focusing this fall on cleaning out any dead trees or bushes, and pouring a concrete floor for the large building. I hate to make any plans for the rest of 2020 (since this year is so bizarre), but those are tentative goals.

There’s so much to do between now and moving to the farm, but at least where we are ending up is no longer a question. Of course we will document the whole journey!

I’m off to make 400 to-do lists, and enjoy what we have left of this hot summer Sunday. Thank you so much for supporting our small Iowa businesses, we really appreciate you!

See you soon!

Rachael