I consider myself very lucky to live where I live. Not only is my neck of the woods considered to be one of the most desirable and most beautiful vacation spots in Canada, I won the house lottery when I was looking for an affordable rental back in 2000.
I had just moved back from having lived in Halifax, Nova Scotia for a year and April is not the nicest month to be trekking through Central Ontario looking for a place to live. It was an unseasonably harsh winter that year and I received a tip from a friend about a little house that would be advertised for rent in the near future. My parents and I drove two minutes out of town and ventured down the snow-covered driveway to get a closer look.
The snow was piled high in front of the house but I trudged my way through the banks and climbed a mountain of snow to a window that looked into the kitchen. I was smitten. After making my way around the house to peer in the rest of the windows, I had surmised the kitchen was the biggest room in the tiny house and I knew I was meant to live here. I rented the house for four years before I finally convinced my landlady to sell me the property. She loved having me as a tenant so she agreed to deduct the rent I had paid from what was deemed a fair price for the property and I became a homeowner in 2004.
Fast forward to today. Although this six-hundred square foot gem has been my refuge and the place that has allowed my greatest amount of creativity, it is beginning to show its age. This tiny building, nestled into almost three acres of property, was crafted in 1940 and designed to be an out-building of a long-forgotten farm property. It has given yeoman service as a principal residence but lately it has begun to make noises I have not heard in my almost twenty years as a resident.
There are now creaks in places where once there had been silence. The clicks from the baseboard heaters have become much more pronounced and, when the mercury slips down below minus 30 degrees Celsius, the argumentative pops and bangs from the house are much louder than I remember.
Through no fault of its own, my house has aged. If I consider how much I have changed since I have lived here, I should not be taken aback by the deep wrinkles and age lines of the place I have called my home for almost two decades. Although it is tiny in square footage, it is a giant in its presence on my property. I can only hope its perseverance is as strong as mine and we can tackle a few more years together on this land we call home.
I hope you and your house can persevere together…it’s a lovely place.
Thank you…I do love it!
Greetings, my friend – I wanted to let you know I received your check this weekend so all is well. I have put together a trio of my books for you to read – I hope you enjoy! I plan to mail them tomorrow so hopefully they will get to you sometime next week! Thank you so much for your interest in all of the works of your blogging friends. I think that’s a really super encouragement for all of us! Warmest wishes to you in these cold winter months…Sheila
I’m glad the cheque made it and I can’t wait to get your books! Thank you so much for sending them. 😃 Fingers crossed for Spring to come soon!! xx
My home is a condo in a four-unit building in downtown Portland, Oregon, that was built in the 1920s. My urban environment is far different from your rural one, but I can sure relate to the creaks and groans your old gal is making. But I wouldn’t trade it for anything—so much character that you just don’t find in tract housing! I hope you’ll be able to enjoy as many more years as you want in what looks like an amazing place.