Cabin Life Magazine

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WWW.CABINLIFE.COM VOL. 13 NO. 2 03 71896 46752 0 9 IDEAS TO INSPIRE WHAT AN ARCHITECT CAN DO FOR YOU RENOVATION TIPS BEFORE & AFTER: A COTTAGE REDO OLD TIME CHARM ONE COUPLE FINDS JOY IN ANTIQUING THEIR CABIN BLACK MAGIC CHARCOAL BARBEQUING IS MAKING A COMEBACK. MARCH 2014

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Transcript of Cabin Life Magazine

W W W. C A BI N L I F E .C O M

V O L . 1 3 N O . 2

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71896 467520 9

IDEAS TO INSPIREWHAT AN ARCHITECT CAN DO FOR YOU

RENOVATION TIPSBEFORE & AFTER: A COTTAGE REDO

OLD TIME CHARMONE COUPLE FINDS JOY IN ANTIQUING THEIR CABIN

BLACK MAGICCHARCOAL BARBEQUING IS MAKING A COMEBACK.

MARCH 2014

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CABIN LIFE | March 2014 9

GOconfidently in the

direction of your dreams.

LIVE the life you have imagined.

{ HENRY DAVID THOREAU }

FEATURES

BLACK MAGIC {20} Charcoal makes a comeback; As convenient as gas grilling

is, there’s no substitute.

IDEAS TO INSPIRE {24} What a professional designer

can provide when building, renovating or adding on

RENOVATION TIPS {36} Before & after: A cottage redo.

Discover 23 products for renovating your cabin.

GONE CYCLING {44} How to choose the right bike

for you, your guests, and your cabin terrain

HELPING WILDLIFE {56} When an animal is in danger,

know what to look for and risks with getting involved.

MARCH 2014

COVER STORY

OLD TIME CHARMOne couple finds joy inantiquing their cabin.

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Get a full year’s worth of Cabin Lifecabinlife.com/subscribe

Didn’t catch last month’s issue? See select stories at cabinlife.com/magazine

EDITOR’S NOTE

FROM THE DECKNews • Products • Tips • Reader Mail Wildlife • Book Reviews

MY CABIN- A Quiet Hideaway in the Woods- A Welcoming Lakeside Cabin with a View

NOW & THENDo-It-Yourself Pathway

PETS AT THE CABINShould your dog drink from the lake?

PHOTO ALBUMCabin Candids

Q & AProtect your wood floors during renovation.

FLOOR PLANDreams on paper

DEPARTMENTS

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HOW FAR WILL YOU GO?

THE PASSION FOR CABINS, COTTAGES, LAKEHOMES, & CAMPS STRETCHES FAR AND WIDE

Where’s your place? It’s one of the most common questions that we cabiners ask each other. And reading between the lines, we’re also curious to find out: How far do you commute from your primary home to your retreat? Over the past 12 years, I’ve heard answers on both extremes.

I’ve interviewed people who travel only 30 miles. (Be still, my jealous heart). They think nothing of making the 45-minute drive on a summer evening so they can waterski or canoe on their lake, hike or bike on their trails, or just watch the sunset from their deck.

But then, I also interviewed a couple who commuted from their home in San Diego, California, to their cottage on Michigan’s Lake Charlevoix. How in love with your cabin do you have to be to travel more than 2,400 miles, about 35 hours by car? Crazy in love.

Most of us understand that kind of passion, don’t we? Our passion for cabin living and the rewards that it gives us - reconnection with friends, family, nature and with the best parts of ourselves - can make us do crazy things. The cabin commute is just one of those crazy things.

The list may go on and on to digging an outhouse hole on a hot summer day, unclogging drain tile during a rainstrom, evicting hordes of bats, de-skunking a dog. My list includes those things, and your list probably gets even more interesting than that!

Your Cabin Life editors stretch far and wide to capture cabin stories. In this issue, for example, you’ll read about cabins in Georgia (p. 10), Virginia (p. 18), and Ontario (p. 20).

We’d love to hear about your cabin and your passion for cabin living! Email us at [email protected].

MARK R. JOHNSONEditor in Chief

EDITORIAL OFFICES: Editor, Cabin Life, P.O. Box 1612, Waukesha, WI 53187, CUSTOMER SERVICES: Cabin Life Magazine, 21027 Crossroads Circle, P.O. Box 1612, Waukesha, WI 53187-1612; 1-800-533-6644,

customer sevice online 24 hours a day at www.cabinlife.com or email: [email protected]

CABIN LIFE | March 2014 7

ONE COUPLE FINDS JOY IN ANTIQUING

THEIR CABIN

BY CHRISTY HEITGER

Are you a “junkie?” I’m not referring to a sports, chocolate, or television enthu-siast. I’m talking about the addicted an-tique junkie who lives to snoop out and snatch up new (well, old) “junk” that will fit seamlessly into their cottage décor.

Kris Walseth is one such self-proclaimed junkie who has no plans to seek therapy for her addiction because to her, search-ing for antiques is therapy.

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TAKING THE OLD AND KEEPING IT OLD

Purchased in 2001, Kris and Dan Walseth gutted their 60-year-old, 600-square-foot cabin in order to winterize it. When they gutted it, they saved and reused the original pine board paneling to give the place an “olden” feel. They also used reclaimed timber on the ceiling and floor, and outfitted the entire place with old door hardware, light switch plates, kitchen cabinetry, light fixtures, lamp shades, wall sconces, book cases, table lamps, and furniture.

Why all the fuss? It’s pretty simple.

We didn’t want our cabin to look like a suburban home, says Kris. “There’s much more charm and character in a place that looks old.”

“ANTIQUING THE CABIN HAS MADE IT SO

COZY AND INVITING; JUST THE WAY A CABIN

SHOULD BE.”

SCOUT GADGETS BELOW In a room decorated

with boy scout antiques, this compass, dart

collection, and pocket knife adds character.

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WHAT TO BUY…AND WHERE TO PUT IT

Kris gathers ideas from all sorts of places – the Internet, antique stores, architectural salvage shops, magazines. Then she comes home and col-laborates with her fabulous carpenter, Rick, who installs everything from doorknobs and drawer pulls to bookshelves and wall sconces.

The inspiration for her red and green living room wall came from stepping inside a little Scandina-vian shop. There she spotted a unique red, green and gold hutch. Mesmerized by the striking col-or pattern, she decided to incorporate that same color scheme into her cabin. So she worked with Rick and together they came up with the idea of hanging the hutch on the wall and then building shelving all around it that reaches up to the ceil-

ing. This addition added both charm and function-ality to the room. Kris insists that antiquing is not about acquiring old stuff. Rather, it’s about using décor to set a desired tone or feeling.

“Not everything in my cabin needs to be ancient,” says Kris. “If I see something I like and it fits with the feel that I’m going for, then I bring it home.”

Sometimes Kris will buy now and think later about what to do with her purchase. For instance, she came across a beautiful piece of intricately carved wooden trim. She didn’t know where she’d put it at first, but a few days later inspiration struck and she realized it would look great on the side of one of the bunk beds.

PENNANT FLAGS TOP LEFT A collection

of pennant flags is scattered and hung

throughout this eclectic cabin.

ECLECTIC BOOKS BOTTOM LEFT This group

of aged books is flanked by an assortment

of collectables like minature canoes.

POSTCARD PILLAR RIGHT This spinning tower

holds a collection of postcards for beautiful

vaction spots from Georgia to Texas.

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WESTERN GEAR

LEFT The western-decorated room houses this saddle and boots to create a real sense of environment.

T H E R E ’ S N O

S U B S T I T U T E

F O R G R I L L I N G

O V E R C H A R C O A L

A PERSONAL TREASURE TROVEIn the end, perhaps the greatest treasures are not the treasures themselves, but rather the memories that go along with how each unique antique was acquired. For the Walseths, there are many such pieces. For instance, there’s the 70-year-old chair that came from Kris’ best friend’s parents. And the dining chairs that Kris’ folks purchased as newly-weds over 60 years ago. And the cool tortoise shell doorknob that came from an antique shop in Mich-igan’s Upper Peninsula. But by far, the most popu-lar conversation starter at the Walseth cabin is the trumpet table lamp – made out of the 75-year-old coronet that once belonged to Dan’s father.

“I love that it was made into a usable piece of furni-ture and is displayed in our living room rather than sitting in a case where it wouldn’t see the light of day – no pun intended,” says Kris.

This antique junkie loves her hobby and it shows.

“Antiquing the cabin has made it so cozy and invit-ing,” says Kris. “Just the way a cabin should be.”

Frequent contributor Christy Heitger doesn’t pur-posefully collect antiques; she just doesn’t clean out her closets as often as she should.

ARROW ASSORTMENT

TOP LEFT These colorful arrows are a unique antique that brings a pop of color to the cabin.

INDIAN JOURNALS

TOP RIGHT A collection of journals and books sit aside a tall lamp with a Native American Indian base.

FISHERMAN FIREPLACE

BOTTOM This cluster of fishing poles sits on the fireplace beside an American flag and metal tackle box.

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CHARCOAL BARBEQUING IS MAKING A COMEBACK

BY LISA READIE MAYER

Charcoal barbequing is making a comeback. As convenient as gas grilling is, there’s no substitute for the aromas, involvement, flavor and nostalgia that grilling over charcoal brings. Those pillow-shaped briquettes you cooked over years ago, are still the most common and least expensive type of charcoal fuel available today.

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C H A R C O A LG R I L L I N ’ T I P S

These uniform, compressed briquettes are made from charred hardwoods, and various fillers and binders to hold them together. They burn evenly, but the quality can vary greatly, so look for a high content of charred hard-wood. Briquettes can be lit with lighter fluid, solid lighter cubes, electric charcoal starters or chimney starters. In addition to this old standard, there is a whole new range of cooking fuels worth checking out. Here are a few different examples:

INSTANT-LIGHTING BRIQUETTESInstant-lighting briquettes are traditional charcoal bri-quettes that have been pre-treated with lighter fluid. They can be lit with a match and are convenient, quick and reliable. They are more expensive than regular charcoal, but do save time, effort and mess.

LIGHT-THE-BAG CHARCOALA pre-measured amount of instant-lighting briquettes – just enough for one cookout – is sealed inside a special paper bag. The entire, unopened bag is placed in the base of the grill and its corners are lit with a match. Premium priced for the great convenience it offers, this product is ideal for camping, tailgating, or even backyard chefs who don’t want to get their hands dirty.

PILE COALS IN A PYRAMID SHAPE, LIGHT THEM, AND LET BURN FOR 20 MINUTES BEFORE COOKING. AFTERWARDS, SPREAD COALS OUT FOR AN EVEN BASE.

FOR NON INSTANT-LIGHTING COALS, SOAK THEM WITH ABOUT 1/2 CUP OF LIGHTER FLUID. WAIT A FEW MINUTES FOR THE FLUID TO SOAK IN BEFORE LIGHTING.

AFTER PREHEATING, USE A LONG-HANDLED WIRE GRILL BRUSH TO RID GRILL RACK OF PREVIOUSY COOKED FOOD DEBRIS.

KEEP A SPRAY WATER BOTTLE HANDY. . . JUST IN CASE OF FLARE-UPS, WHICH CAN BURN YOUR FOOD.

“ T H E R E ’ S N O

S U B S T I T U T E

F O R G R I L L I N G

O V E R C H A R C O A L .”

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WOOD CHIPSWood chips are also used to add a boost of wood smoke flavor to a charcoal or gas barbeque. Not a primary fuel, they are presoaked first and generally used a handful at a time. Chips are available in a multitude of flavors, including apple, cherry, pecan, oak, hickory, mesquite, orangewood, grapevine, wine barrel staves, whiskey barrel chips and more.

NATURAL HARDWOOD LUMP CHARCOALThe fastest growing type of charcoal, natural hard-wood lump charcoal consists of chunks of pure hardwood that have been charred in a kiln. Lump charcoals are all natural, with no petroleum or oth-er additives included. Not uniform like briquettes, natural lump charcoal comes in jagged, irregular-shaped pieces. These charcoal chunks burn hotter than traditional briquettes and they generate less ash, so clean-up is minimal. They light easily with newspaper in a chimney starter or with solid light-er cubes, and manufacturers are beginning to offer instant-lighting lump charcoal coated with paraffin wax rather than petroleum. Pricier than regular bri-quettes, fans say they’re worth it for the pure smoke flavor they impart.

COOKING WOOD CHUNKSThese chunks of dried hardwoods, approximately two-inches square, are pure wood in its natural state. Wood chunks are used most often in smokers, but are really catching on for grills, too, where they’re used as a flavor-enhancer in addition to charcoal or gas. Remember, a little goes a long way. Too much wood smoke can cause a bitter taste in food. Mesquite and hickory are the most popular varieties.

“ T H E R E ’ S N O

S U B S T I T U T E

F O R G R I L L I N G

O V E R C H A R C O A L .”

“ T H E R E ’ S N O

S U B S T I T U T E

F O R G R I L L I N G

O V E R C H A R C O A L .”

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KICKIN’ BURGERS TOP LEFT & RIGHT

Juicy, jalepenjo burgers sizzle over

charcoal, and are served with red onion,

iceburg lettuce, and pepperjack cheese.

ASH BRIQUETTES ABOVE After being

soaked in lighter fluid, and allowed to

burn for 20 minutes, these coals are

perfectly prepared for charcoal grilling.

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