Storm over Canada and Lake Huron - view taken just down a short path from the cabin we worked on |
When
I say this place is beautiful, I'm not kidding. It's located right
on the lake and reminds me of looking out at the Gulf of Mexico from
the beaches I grew up on in Pensacola (except the sand here is not as pretty as the Pensacola beaches). You look straight out and see
nothing but water. But if you look closely to the right, you can
barely see Canada. The beach here is gravely and a light brownish
color. And the water is cold. Almost as cold as Fires Creek.
Needless to say, I did not go swimmiing.
One of the many freighters we saw heading north |
The
retreat started out years and years ago as a Jewish girl's summer
camp. In 1946, the camp ran into financial difficulty and was put on
the market. A number of local Methodist churches pooled their
resources and bought it. A few years later, the Methodist Conference
took it over to make it into what it is today – mostly an adult
retreat center. It has done very well hosting many different groups.
While we've been here, one week hosted disadvantaged adults, another
week a group of we-don't-know-what-they-were (but our main contact
Dan called them grown up hippies), and this week is a “License to
Preach” session for deacons and lay ministers. Everyone we have
met have been super nice so it's made working here a pleasure.
Dan knocking off the side room of the original cabin - you can see a bit of Lake Huron in the background |
But
back to the cabin. We started out thinking we were going to replace
the roof and take all the old cedar-shake panels off the walls then
replace the roof and the panels. But after the building inspector
came out, things changed. Yes, the roof was still coming off but we
had to tear down three of the original walls and replace them. You
wonder why not just tear down all the walls and start over again.
Well, that's where local regulations entered the picture. The cagin
is located too close to the water for modern set-back laws, but if
the cabin was not being completely torn down, it could remain in its
current position. So, we had to leave at least one wall and build
new walls off of it. What fun!
There goes half of the roof. |
But
you know what we say about ourselves - “NOMADS are flexible!”
Dan
had a company come in to take off the roof. That's was interesting.
We all stayed way back out of the way but scrambled like a bunch of
busy ants tearing off the roof shingles and tar paper once the roof
structure was on the ground. After that, we tore down the old
chimney and hauled the bricks across the busy highway to an area
behind our Rvs then we got to work tearing down the walls. New walls
were built and braced into place, new roof trusses were set in place,
and now we are almost done putting the roof sheathing on and should
get close to finishing the sheathing on the walls. A lot of work for
nine NOMADS and intripid Dan to do in three weeks.
There it goes - flying through the air. Note how far back we stayed! |
This
has been a really nice place for a project. For the most part, the
weather here has been great. We've had a few hot days and few rainy
and very windy days, but mostly it's been cool. One morning, it was
51 degrees and warmed up to the high 60s by the afternoon. A relief
from our hot southern summers and I loved it!
It's
been fun driving around this part of Michigan. We even went over to
Canada for a day. Let's see, we've been to London, Memphis, Paris,
Richmond, Yale, just to name a few of the places we visited. Of
course, they were all in a 70 mile radius from Port Huron. And I got
to stop in six different quilt shops – one was in an old
decommissioned Catholic church, another one was in an old motel (the
shop itself took up four or five of the original rooms – fantastic
shop), and a couple were in old storefronts in poor downtown areas.
Bill directing the first new roof truss into place |
We
started packing up this evening; heading out tomorrow evening after
we finish working. Need to get to Elkhart, IN by Friday morning to
have some problems with the RV resolved. Elkhart is the home for
Forest River so we want them to solve our minor problems. Then we
head down to Mitchell, IN for another project. That's probably why
I'm sitting here composing a blog entry because we packed away the
television satellite antenna and don't feel like using the
over-the-air antenna (all we can get on it is a couple of Canadian
The cabin starting to take shape with all the new roof trusses in place and one wall built |
And so it goes for another enjoyable NOMADS project.
More
later . . .
p.s. It has taken me forever to get the dumb pictures to download. For some reason, the "before" pictures I took of the cabin won't download onto this blog. Frustration personafied! But I will try to remember to download the pictures I took of the cabin as we finished it at the end of this project then you can really see what we got done.
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