Sometime is the midst of chaos, you just have to have one spot, one little corner that looks happy and peaceful to keep you from going crazy.
Right now, the Apple House is in a total state of chaos. There is furniture in all sorts of places it shouldn't be. My front porch has furniture on it that won't fit in the house, the play room is partially filled with boxes and furniture. I think a small storage unit may be in my future, or possibly enclosing our lower back patio. Anyway, while I'm happy to have a plethora of 'junk' that needs a little AHR style love, I also get a little twitchy when all of my surroundings are crazy like this.
So a few days ago, this happened.
It's just a small space in this overwhelming world of projects that need to be done, but it is a small space that makes me happy.
This angle isn't as good, but the lighting is better and you can see one of my five hanging baskets (another post about them is coming soon.)
I hung my 'Welcome' sign above the door. I love the contrast of the green against the brown logs and the red door.
I also created one of my multi-colored sign backgrounds for the "W", but it isn't a sign. I have no idea what that thing actually is. My friend, Sarah, found it in one of the junk stores we visit. I asked her "what is it?" She said "It's a W." OOOOOOH! Of course it is! Who cares what it ACTUALLY is, for us it's a cool monogram for our front porch.
And I picked up this old rusted tool box (also full of cool rusted stuff) from a local garage sale for $2.00. I cleaned it off and sprayed it with a clear coat to preserve the rust and also prevent it from rusting further. Some potting soil and a few pretty flowers later and I am giddy!
And so you'll know why, here is the rest of my porch. Actually it looks worst than this now. I added an old table that needs to be reassembled and revived to the mess. Yep, that is what people see when the pull up to my house. Sad, huh. I'm working on it, but in the mean time, I just needed one little corner of pretty.
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I'm sharing at
Funky Junk's Saturday Night Special
Showing posts with label front porch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label front porch. Show all posts
Monday, May 16, 2011
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Better than Iowa in 1846
I am descended from Mormon Pioneers. In 1846 my ancestors were among those who fled their home in Nauvoo, Illinois and started out on the great American Exodus that was the Mormon Migration to the Rocky Mountains.
They crossed the Mississippi River in the middle of winter. They traveled the first 300 miles at a painfully slow pace through the spring mud of the Iowa plains. My great grandmother watched her husband march away with the Mormon Battalion, leaving her to cross the remainder of the plains alone. They suffered through a winter at Winter Quarters, Iowa, where sickness and death were rampant. All the while, the Saints built houses, sturdy bridges, and roads, not for their own short term use, but for the many travelers who would come after them. They planted gardens that they would never harvest, intended only for those who would follow.
They arrived in the Salt Lake Vally in 1847. My ancestors first settled in Salt Lake City but were dispatched to Grantsville, UT about 1850, only three years later. Even then, they were not to remain for long, as they were soon asked to move to Paradise, UT to establish a community there.
Uncertainty was a way of life for them. Home was where ever they were at the time. They left each place knowing they would never return.
Why, on a blog about renovating a log house, would I write about the travels and trials of my ancestors? In answer to my recent silence.
* Moving to an apple orchard in North Central Washington was never at the top of my adventure list. I left a home I love, a community I love, dear friends, and the city I consider home.
* Over the course of the last month we have come to realize that the renovations the Apple House need are not simply cosmetic, but more drastic and necessary for continued habitation.
* In addition, the entire purpose for our drastic move, a job that would repay student loans and help us recover from adoption and medical expenses, has stalled and every incentive we had to come here is suddenly in question.
I have been throwing myself a pretty little pity party. In my anger over the uncertainty of our situation I have not wanted to work on the Apple House. I have wondered, WHY SHOULD I strip wall paper, stain curtain rods, and hang shelves in a home that I may never get to enjoy?
I have gratefully found the quiet answer in the example of my ancestors.
Because someone will enjoy it, and they will be thankful. Because the simple act of hard work will keep you mind occupied and push away anxious thoughts. Because it isn't a covered wagon and this isn't that bad.
Mormon Pioneers also did a few other things that I have found to worthy of emulation. They sang as they walked and worked along the trail. Every evening, (despite what must have seemed like a never ending trek) they circled their wagons, lit a fire, played music and danced. How long could depression linger when cheerful music and dancing was a part of your daily routine?
Today I painted my front door bright red. I feel a lot better. Tomorrow I will sew curtains as I listen to cheerful pioneer songs.
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front porch
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