I have a very special deal to share with you all today! Are you familiar with The Tiny House Magazine? You should be. They've been sharing a huge variety of stories from the tiny house world for years now. In fact for so many years, that this month is issue 100! Once again you will find an article from me in there. Covering some details of one aspect of my tiny house journey that I had not yet written about anywhere else yet to this extent. You will have to go read the issue to find out what I am talking about though. 😀
And thanks to a very generous offer the editors have allowed me to share, you can get a copy for no charge for a limited time. Use coupon code: THM100 at checkout time. Get your copy here! https://tinyhousemagazine.co/issue-100/
The magazine is a labor of love by everyone involved as none of the authors are paid, and the subscription costs just cover keeping it operating. If you are interested in real stories from the tiny house community, I think you would enjoy a subscription too! Hopefully the magazine is still around sharing stories from the tiny house world for hundreds more issues.
I have written a handful of other articles for the Tiny House Magazine over the years (you can find my stories in issues 28, 37, 38, 73, 96 too), and never shared any of them outside of there before. But since it's been many years, I thought it would be neat to share with you all the very first thing I wrote for the magazine. It's funny for me to go back and read this week's diary as so much has changed in my life and house in the six years since writing this. I don't remember exactly which photos were with the original story, but I've sprinkled in a few from that time. If you have followed this blog since it's start in 2014, you will remember these. If you are newer here, yes, that's still my same house, but you can see how I've changed things over the years to fit my needs.
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I have written a handful of other articles for the Tiny House Magazine over the years (you can find my stories in issues 28, 37, 38, 73, 96 too), and never shared any of them outside of there before. But since it's been many years, I thought it would be neat to share with you all the very first thing I wrote for the magazine. It's funny for me to go back and read this week's diary as so much has changed in my life and house in the six years since writing this. I don't remember exactly which photos were with the original story, but I've sprinkled in a few from that time. If you have followed this blog since it's start in 2014, you will remember these. If you are newer here, yes, that's still my same house, but you can see how I've changed things over the years to fit my needs.
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A Week in a Tiny House
Did you ever wander what every day life is like in a tiny house? When it's not still being built or photographed all nice and tidy and looking like a showroom model? Just ordinary daily brush-your-teeth-and-go-to- work kind of life? Is it vastly different than your daily life? What extra chores are there? Or hidden inconveniences?
Hi there! I'm Ariel. I am a single 28 year old woman who lives in a tiny house. To give you a bit of context, my house is built on a 24 foot trailer making it totally mobile and road legal (though I have a sweet parking spot and no plans to move it anytime soon) and has 229 square feet of livable space inside, counting my lofts. I helped design a custom layout, mostly centered around the fact that I cook a lot and wanted a large kitchen, and it was built for me by Tumbleweed. I moved in on Thanksgiving day this past November and live in it full time. I live by myself, but frequently have friends over including overnight guests. I live in the mountains of western WY and due to my secluded location, am completely off grid. Here's what a random week of my life in my tiny home looks like.
3/23/15 - Monday
I went into work this morning. Three days a week I open at the restaurant where I work which drags me out of bed much earlier than I'd prefer. Who really wants coffee to be ready at 6:30 am anyway? I don't like the stuff at all myself, but I seem to be in the minority I suppose.
After leaving work, I did a big grocery shopping trip and made it to the gym only a few minutes late for a Crossfit class. I've been trying to get back in good shape for backpacking this summer after battling a nasty cold for almost 4 weeks that left me with no energy for exercise.
When I returned home, my best friend Seth came over and hung out while tying some more flies for his next fishing trip. I intended to cook a bunch of things, but I was super tired so I just heated up some of the tomato soup I'd made the day before and grilled up some gluten and dairy free quesadillas to go with it. I did get a new batch of alfalfa sprouts growing in a little jar so I'll have them to add to some meals in a few more days. After dinner we were going to watch a movie, but decided we were both pretty shot and should head to bed instead. He's crashing on the guest bed/couch since we both have to get up about the same time in the morning for work. And since he only has an old RV to live in, which means sleeping in my tiny house is much nicer in the winter at least!
I worked this morning and while there, snow started to fall for the first time in almost a month. It's nice to see a fresh clean coating on everything since it's been pretty brown for a while. When I got home from work, around 3 pm, I shoveled out all my little paths around the house and then decided the sun was melting the snow off the solar panels fast enough that I didn't need to clean them off. Inside I wiped the condensation off the windows. The mold problem that my window frames have had seems to be staying in check at the moment thanks to warmer weather in general and my effort to keep any condensation wiped up regularly.
I filled my water tank as well, driving my van over to my friends hydrant and filling all my big jugs. Returning with 24 gallons of water in the van, I nearly filled my internal tank which had been almost dry the night before. The water dripping off the roof from the melting snow, tried to find it's way down my neck as I poured the large jugs in to the tank, but really it's not that bad of a chore. I usually use about 140 gallons a month, about the same as the average American uses in one day.
Then, for the first time since moving in here over Thanksgiving, I emptied the solids tank on my composting toilet. I know, that doesn't sound like a a very fun task. My friend Seth assured me in no uncertain terms to never ask for his help with this chore. But really, the contents composted even faster than I expected. I do have composting worms in there that speed up the process. Everything but the last two days additions looked and smelled like damp potting soil. No bad or sewage-y odors at all. Now the former toilet contents are in my outdoor composting bin, decomposing even further. And hey, if I only have to empty this thing 3 times a year, that's not too bad at all.
After wrapping up that project, I cooked dinner. Two different meals actually. A bean and sausage soup and pulled chicken, garlic potatoes, and beet greens. Since I barter food for things like my lot to park my house on and my gym membership, I then packed all the food up for other people, and washed the resulting full sink of dishes. I also brewed a new batch of tea for my kombucha scoby's and bottled the current batch of kombucha. I really love drinking this stuff! While working on projects like this that are relatively mindless, I like to listen to audio books. Right now I'm nearly done with "The Murder Room" a true story about some private detectives that work on cracking long cold murder cases. It's pretty interesting. Despite being tiny, I do have a pretty large pantry and nearly full sized fridge/freezer in my house. And they stay stuffed and well stocked at all times. If you locked me in my house I think I could cook and eat for at least a month before the meals started to seriously lack variety.
After all that, I didn't eat any of the meals I had cooked and instead joined my friend Clay for dinner at his place. Later I watched a movie, and am headed to bed with the snow still falling softly outside.
3/25/15 - Wednesday
I got to wake up this morning without an alarm clock as I am actually off work! And that's pretty exciting since I've worked almost every day all winter and am working the next twelve days as well. The snow stopped overnight and the sky was bright blue when the sun came up.
After a breakfast of eggs, avocado, and strawberries, shoveled out all my paths again. I finished topping off my water tank with two more full jugs I'd filled up at my friends place. Now I won't need to get water for quite a while. Then I baked some caramel oatmeal bars, swept my floor, and took the trash out to the dumpster I share with some neighbors since the trash goes out in the morning. I finished my last audio book and started "The Clockwork Orange." A title I've heard of but don't really know anything about. I also spent a bit of time writing and just may have eaten two whole clam shells of blackberries in the process.
In the afternoon I ran into town and filled up a propane tank, some of my gas cans, checked my P.O. box, returned some audio books to the library, and ran by the grocery store to see if they still had berries on sale. My errands had piled up a bit due to being out of town the later half of the week before on a fishing trip with a friend. The grocer did still have berries on sale. Raspberries and blueberries as well as blackberries this time, so I stocked up on a ton of them. My receipt said I saved $159.37 on a bill of $45. That's pretty sweet. Then I made it to the gym in time for a Crossfit class and to drop off meals for a couple people. Later in the afternoon I filled my dehydrator with berries and overripe bananas as well as froze quite a few bags of berries. These will all come in handy when backpacking and baking in the future.
I fired up my generator and let it run t for about 4 hours to top off the battery bank though with the days getting longer and having been mostly sunny recently, my solar panels have been producing a lot of power on their own. I think all summer I will not need the generator at all.
For dinner I made a roast topped with my homemade sauerkraut, maple glazed sweet potatoes, and garlic asparagus and shared this meal with Clay as well. I have had 5 people all seated at the table for dinner at once, and could probably fit 6, after that, we could not all sit at the table. But having only 2 - 4 people at a time is a little more comfortable. After a relaxing evening of conversation, I am headed to sleep again. This time with the moon that is barely half full lighting up the snow strongly enough to cast shadows.
3/26/15 - Thursday
I did work today, at my part time day care job, but was able to show up a little later than normal which was nice. I pulled most of the bananas out of the dehydrator before leaving since overnight seems to be long enough for them to dry. It was another sunny day with blue skies and a day with pretty mellow kids which is nice. I was even able to do a bit of writing while they all slept.
On the way home, I stopped by the gym and worked out on my own since I didn't want to wait for the next class time. Either I'm going to be stronger again soon, or I'm just going to be really sore all over. While there, I washed my hair (something I only do about every five days since long fine hair get's very brittle in this dry climate if washed too often). I don't use my shower at home even though it's fully functioning just because I'd have to haul so much extra water to refill my tank. So I use the gym's city water connection and save myself some work.
My driveway, since it's just a dirt lane with some wood chips on it is super soggy right now thanks to that last snowfall melting rapidly. Until it dries out, I'm leaving my van parked on the gravel a little ways from the house and walking back and forth so I don't tear up the ground or get myself stuck. Once home, I checked on my drying fruit and some of the blueberries were done. Apparently blackberries and raspberries take longer than I was expecting.
Seth came over to hang out and do some writing and sleep tonight. I just heated up leftovers from last night for our dinner and took a break from really cooking. It's staying light till just after 8 p.m. these days. It seems like just last month that it was dark at 4 in the afternoon. Seth's recovered enough from his back injury last summer to finally be able to sit on my couch for a while instead of having to stand or lay down. He's typing rapidly in a deep philosophical debate and I'm sipping a glass of sparkling apple mango juice as I type. This is a pretty relaxing evening.
The pretty little creek that runs about 20 feet from my front door is getting loud! All the ice that sealed it up all winter is now gone and it's getting high and brown with all the snow melt. I can hear it's gentle roar through the window I keep slightly open in my loft bedroom as I head to bed.
3/27/15 - Friday
Since Seth slept here last night and didn't have to work this morning, I tried to be really quiet when I got up. Not that it really does any good since he's such a light sleeper and I think was awake before my alarm even went off. But that is a challenge in a small space. When the furtherest away from someone you can be is 24 feet or less, it's pretty hard not wake them up. Especially when the other person is a very light sleeper.
I worked at the restaurant today. After work we had a meeting about scheduling for the coming months. I think I'll be able to stick with the same plan as last summer, work three days in a row, bake for the restaurant one of those evenings, and have four and a half full days off every week to go backpacking. Ahh, the freedoms of low bills, choosing to not buy much, and having nothing like a school loan to pay off!
I might have seen a wolf today. There is one that has left tracks in the snow around my house several times this winter, but I've never actually gotten to see him. But this afternoon I saw something canine-ish for sure, though it was a long way off and moving uphill across the creek from my house. No one seems to have any dogs that roam around here, but it could have been a coyote, it was a good ways away. The gate seemed more wolf like though... Who knows?
Carrying bags of groceries in from the far end of the lane where there is dry gravel to park on can be a bit of a workout. Mostly because I try to make as few trips as possible so I'm always trying to hold onto too many things at once. Right now there are few dry spots in the drive, but lots of mud for tires to sink into. I'll be happy when it all dries up and I'm able to pull right up to my house again. I'll have to be sure to carry the trash out with me when I leave in the morning. Especially with as few square feet as I have in my house, you don't want to leave anything stinky in the garbage. The whole house will start to smell pretty rapidly.
After work I made dinner for my former room mate Beth. She and I lived together for 6 years and got to be pretty close. We were room mates right up till I moved into this tiny house after the place we'd been renting was sold. She moved in with some other girl friends. We have both been working a lot all winter and have not been able to hang out much. She brought over a pistachio cheese cake since she's a great cook and baker and know that is close to my favorite dessert. Forget dairy free if there is a cheesecake within reach! I'll deal with some stomach pains. It was nice to catch up on each other's lives. We talked till I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore.
3/28/15 - Saturday
When I awoke this morning I could hear a pair of whooping (sandhill) cranes in the distance. I think there is a pair nesting not to far from my house. They are super loud but pretty neat birds to watch. It seemed like I had more condensation on windows this morning than sometimes. Maybe it was just a little colder last night than it's been in a while. I wiped it all up and thought again about how I wish I would have designed this place with a few less (I have 15) windows and have a few larger ones. They'd be much easier to clean up.
Another day of work. On the way there, I had a mouse run right across my toes while driving. I had trapped one a few weeks ago but I guess more are figuring out how to get in now that all their tunnels through the snow around here are melting and they are looking for new homes. Agh! I least it wasn't a spider, I would have probably had a wreck if it was. I guess I'll have to reset my traps in there. I don't want them chewing up all my camping gear that lives in the van.
Apparently the power was out for a while on the main road I live off of today. Someone told me that power was probably out at my house since they know the general area where I live, while I was still at work. And it was cool to be able to say "I don't think so!" That's a really nice side to all the additional work that living off grid brings with it. I do still have all my stuff working if something goes down with everyone else's connection in the area.
There was a bald eagle flying overhead just up the road from my house on my way home. And then I looked out the window from my loft and saw a hawk skim by. I think he was hunting for mice as they emerge from the melting snow. Too bad he didn't get the ones that want to live in my van. Getting mice in there seems like it might be an ongoing problem as it continues to warm up. Oh the joys of living in remote areas with lots of critters!
It was in the low 60's this afternoon and I was able to leave several windows open for a while. It's always nice to get a bunch of fresh air in the house after keeping everything closed up tight through the winter.
I thought about taking a nap but instead relaxed for a bit and did some reading. I don't have any big projects right now and am feeling very settled into my house. There doesn't seem to be too many surprises coming up now with "oh dear, what do I do about that" kinds of reactions from me. Everything runs pretty much as expected and I think I've (with lots of help from a knowledgeable friend) worked out most of the kinks and gotten over the crest of the off grid learning curve.
Later in the evening I went over to Clay's and watched a couple movies so most of the day was pretty quiet. I stayed up later than I should have since I open tomorrow at the restaurant.
3/29/15 - Sunday
One more early morning at work. It felt like a long day, but maybe that was just because I was sort of tired all day and we were really busy. I came home from work and took a two hour nap which felt amazing.
When I got in my van to drive to work this morning, I realized I had caught two mice overnight. I thought there was only one in there again, I guess I was wrong. So I emptied both traps and reset them. I caught another one a few hours later in the afternoon. I think they are getting in through the engine somehow so I might do some digging around in there tomorrow and see if there is some kind of small gap that I can block with steel wool. I'd love to adopt a shelter cat or two and keep them around but I don't think they would survive 24 hours with all the owls, eagles, hawks, foxes, coyotes, wolves, cats, bears, pine martins, etc that live around here. And I can't keep one inside at all since I'm pretty allergic to them.
Driving home, I passed and was able to get decent photos of two different moose. I see lots of moose around here all the time, but am usually in a hurry or the light isn't good for a photo. I also caught a third mouse by the time I got home. This is going to have to change. I have way too much outdoor gear stored in my van for mice to chew up.
It was warm again today and I opened a bunch of windows today as well. Since my house was built in about 5 days, driven here the next day, I've been living in it ever since, and it's been winter, it has never really had a chance to sit open and get a lot of good air movement. It'll be nice to air everything out more regularly over the summer.
Seth came over and I made trout chowder for dinner with locally caught wild fish thanks to another friend. I fired up my generator to top off the batteries again. And we spent the evening watching epic fail clips and other generally useful things on youtube. Now I'm falling asleep with the sound of the creek outside my window and know that my alarm will come far too early in the morning once again.
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Again, to grab your special limited offer of a free copy of the 100th issue of the magazine and read my latest story in there, use coupon code THM100 at checkout https://tinyhousemagazine.co/issue-100/ . If you are reading this post sometime well into the future, the coupon will probably no longer work, but you should still go subscribe to the magazine anyway for lots of interesting tiny house stories!
Interesting week in your life.
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Loved reading your 'diary'.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your tiny house throughout the years. Enjoyed tuning in often.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Gloria S. It was fun reading your "diary". Doris High
ReplyDeleteI truly enjoyed this article. I want to thank you for the beautiful magazine offer too. On my iPad it is one of the nicest magazines electronically I’ve ever read. Have a wonderful day. Take care.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing and the free copy. I have always enjoyed the content you create.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing this article Ariel and for the discount on the magazine which I did scoop up. So happy you've been sharing again a bit more regularly. I miss you when you're not around.
ReplyDeletelong journey , like you setting on porch.
ReplyDeleteHi Ariel, you sure pack a lot of living into your life, don't know where you get the time to keep abreast of it all, always enjoy hearing about what you get up to, and you got a great way with words, has to be a drop of auld Blarney blood flowing through those veins of yours some where ,cant be all garlic oil juice. Me thinks you are someone that keeps a diary record of all your awakening moments, wonder did you ever read the Berlin Diaries of Maire Vassiltchikov, a Russian princess who along with her sister Tatiana lived in Berlin during w.w.2, two remarkable young women. Tatiana also wrote a few books, one titled Purgatory of fools, and as I am interested in history I enjoyed them both a lot, might not be your cuppa tea though. Tiny house America also is of interest to me, don't see many here in Ireland, but I know we got a few, would love to build one but would to be about twelve by thirty five feet. Built myself a five room brick house before I was 29 , the whole darn thing from foundations to finish by myself, every hour God gave me from dawn til dusk, suppose being a carpenter has some advantages, if it were now though I would have built a not so tiny house on wheels, got a lovely site beside lough on some land I own . Going to have a peep at that tiny house magazine you mention, just the sort of living I dream about, though that is the sort of living I mostly do anyway, Cheers
ReplyDeleteThanks Ariel,
ReplyDeleteWow so interesting to see how much your life has changed since then. The wood stove has solved your window condensation issues, becoming debt free has solved that getting up early for that restaurant job and now you have time to hike and enjoy Burley!!
Roxanne
It’s good reading your life diary from 2015. Very entertaining. That’s interesting about mice finding a way to get in your van. I suppose you found the hole they were getting in. I’m going to get that magazine you mentioned.
ReplyDeleteAriel yOu are a very interesting young lady. I am 82 and love the outdoors. Live in Maine and wish you all the best. Your shows are my favorite to watch and even write down your recipes. Thank you and the best life has to offer you.💕🙏
ReplyDeleteHi Ariel, love your blogs. I’m over 70, have always been a self sufficient type, a gardener and animal lover. Always dreamed of having a hobby farm or homestead but that never happened. But you can do a much even on a city lot!
ReplyDeleteThese are some of the reasons I appreciate what you are doing and lifestyle philosophy.
Thanks for sharing so much.
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