TreeGuyHR
ArboristSite Guru
My family and I built a one-room "Trapper's Tilt" in Massachusetts in the 70's. It was called that because Dad bought a book on building cabins, from which he got the design. Around 16 ft. by 18 ft. inside, it was meant to be a quickie that you "throw up" in a few weeks, to stay in while building your main cabin. It was not only off-the-grid, but off road and up a hill at least a quarter mile.
The whole process took around two years, going up to the property from CT on lots of weekends. Too bad -- if we had been quicker, my Dad might have bought the neighboring property with some nice white pine on it and road access, where we would have built the "nice" cabin. He would have had to pay $500 an acre, so he hesitated -- damn -- now there are a few modern homes there, and I am sure they payed 10 times as much per acre or more. If you can believe it, the cabin property (70 acres) was sold to him for $150 an acre -- wooded and with a creek and washed out old road.
I was the brawn of the op, between the age of 14 - 16. We just used a Stihl 032 with a 16 in. bar, a primitive Sears "Alaskan Mill", and an ax. (kid with the ax in the pic)
We used eastern hemlock trees that were growing nearby -- and found out that almost none of them were straight! So we straightened them by cutting a few saw curfs on the convex side.
We saddle notched the logs by making a series of saw curfs and cleaned them out with an ax, rolling the log in and out to check dimensions. We were proud of it when we had all the logs up (no chain hoist -- just several sets of hands -- I think we may have rolled the top few up some poles) and the roof on --- made of red maple poles covered in heavy tar paper. That night, it looked like a fish trap with the light coming out from a Coleman lantern. We figured that it would settle and close the gaps -- which it did to some extent. We ended up filling the gaps with local clay, moss, and thin saplings.
Bunks and flooring were ripped with the saw (why we didn't burn it up, I don't know -- tough saw). The hemlock knots threw sparks. We sharpened our two chains with a clamp-on file guide. We carried in a small stove and insulated pipe up in pieces.
I was thinking of the cabin because I just fixed up the saw and used it to cut some downed pine off their root wads at my Dad's CT place. Same bar -- no paint, and a burr around the bar around a mm deep on both sides! Didn't get to filing it down.
Unfortunately, the cabin is no more, because we didn't keep up with fixing the roof. Lot's of memories though.
Anyone want to describe building a cabin?
Cabin:
View attachment 265485
Saw:
View attachment 265486View attachment 265487View attachment 265488
The whole process took around two years, going up to the property from CT on lots of weekends. Too bad -- if we had been quicker, my Dad might have bought the neighboring property with some nice white pine on it and road access, where we would have built the "nice" cabin. He would have had to pay $500 an acre, so he hesitated -- damn -- now there are a few modern homes there, and I am sure they payed 10 times as much per acre or more. If you can believe it, the cabin property (70 acres) was sold to him for $150 an acre -- wooded and with a creek and washed out old road.
I was the brawn of the op, between the age of 14 - 16. We just used a Stihl 032 with a 16 in. bar, a primitive Sears "Alaskan Mill", and an ax. (kid with the ax in the pic)
We used eastern hemlock trees that were growing nearby -- and found out that almost none of them were straight! So we straightened them by cutting a few saw curfs on the convex side.
We saddle notched the logs by making a series of saw curfs and cleaned them out with an ax, rolling the log in and out to check dimensions. We were proud of it when we had all the logs up (no chain hoist -- just several sets of hands -- I think we may have rolled the top few up some poles) and the roof on --- made of red maple poles covered in heavy tar paper. That night, it looked like a fish trap with the light coming out from a Coleman lantern. We figured that it would settle and close the gaps -- which it did to some extent. We ended up filling the gaps with local clay, moss, and thin saplings.
Bunks and flooring were ripped with the saw (why we didn't burn it up, I don't know -- tough saw). The hemlock knots threw sparks. We sharpened our two chains with a clamp-on file guide. We carried in a small stove and insulated pipe up in pieces.
I was thinking of the cabin because I just fixed up the saw and used it to cut some downed pine off their root wads at my Dad's CT place. Same bar -- no paint, and a burr around the bar around a mm deep on both sides! Didn't get to filing it down.
Unfortunately, the cabin is no more, because we didn't keep up with fixing the roof. Lot's of memories though.
Anyone want to describe building a cabin?
Cabin:
View attachment 265485
Saw:
View attachment 265486View attachment 265487View attachment 265488