Me, hiking just behind my new retirement home and views of the Kern River from a path further north in the Sequoia National Forest.
I’m mad for this rough, beautiful landscape!
This is a view from my new Weldon house: I bought it for the scenery. I’m restoring it and the land in the most ecologically sound way I can. My goal is to return the 5 acres to something like its original state and live on the land sustainably.
Unfortunately, this is what the house looked like when I bought it.
The home was a double wide “mobile” unit of 1440 sq. feet with good “bones” – as in no structural damage and tile floors. It lacked heating or cooling ducts and most of the plumbing and electrical systems were a mess.Doors were damaged or missing.
And, just…ew.
So, I painted the exterior with ECOS paint which is low VOC and better for the environment than most paint. I’ve also installed a light colored roof to cool the property and I will be installing solar panels.
I added one-way reflective film to the inside windows for cooling and safety. To save money I did all the painting myself.
(Yeah, I’m 63. But I did the work when I was only 62 so it was easy!)
Rather than tear out the kitchen completely, I just sanitized everything then updated the existing cabinetry and replaced the faucet and sink. I put the tile in myself! Sadly, the tiny cute little tile saw I used to cut the material was stolen not once but twice! Nevertheless, I still saved a ton of money tile cutter rentals or paying someone to install it.
I also painted all the walls and ceiling and cut, painted and installed all the molding throughout the entire house using the same mini saw, so at $125 per unit, it was a good deal. I used a molding made out of recycled composite material.
My one and only fossil fuel appliance is the stove. I feel a little guilty about that, but it provides more consistent heat than electric stoves, and in my adult life I have never really had an adult stove.
BTW the rose tile above the sink is a recycled WWII era piece I found in an antique store in Shanghai.
There’s a walk-in shower in the third bathroom and I had the
plumbers route all the shower and laundry waste out of that room as gray water to the yard. I’m going to add a filtration system so that it can become a little pool of drinkable water for wildlife.
For the energy-star washer, I use Planet or Eco detergents which
dispense with the wasteful plastic bottle by reducing the soap to flat strips packed in recyclable paper packs. It’s better for my septic system, the environment and my skin.
There’s no TV yet, but but there is a huge living room with a couch and washable rug which I made from remaindered fabric, some no-slip backing and a fringe I wove myself.
I found the Papasan chair at a Goodwill and recovered it with two cheap black throws. The coffee table was also a junk find, in line with my commitment to reuse/recycle furniture instead of making new stuff with wood, plastic and fabrics.
I made the rock shelves from flat stones picked up on my property.
The table and chairs came with the house, but I’ll replace them when I move to this house permanently after I retire. The nature photos on the wall were taken by me and my son Preston. He’s an actual cinematographer, so his shots make precious gifts.
This a view of the “front yard” of the house. The land is high
desert surrounded by mountains, not far from a man-made lake
and the Kern River. I’ll need to replace the deck with some recycle
composite material in months to come.
Every morning when I work In the office I see wildlife: a roadrunner, quail, rabbits, hawks and ground squirrels most commonly. I have also seen the errant coyote and a few confused cows.
I put together an Ikea bed for the guest bedroom. I buy into the Ikea sustainable philosophy of replanting fast growing softwoods. The
queen sized bed is pine, so it gives off a nice smell. I am using a
mattress-in-a-bag foam base which I find very comfortable and easier to ultimately recycle than a typical mattress.
I repurposed some old shelves with cubby boxes for storage
instead of buying new furniture. I also trimmed and reused old bamboo shades I had saved for a few years since selling my old house.
Views from my office and library, different moods. We get a light dusting of snow in the winter as well as some lovely rainstorms most of the year round.
I supply bamboo toothbrushes and a few sustainable amenities for guests in the guest bathroom. The water glasses are made of wheat
grass. I hung a recycled wooden box with a macramé strap that I
had made from jute on the wall and filled it with organic
bath goodies, too.
Throughout the house, I have used colors inspired by the surrounding nature. This room is meant to evoke a rosy dawn.
Instead of using central air, I put in a these super-efficient electric split mini system units in most rooms.
They allow me to cool or heat only one part of the house at a time. This, of course, saves energy. They’re quiet and don’t ruin windows like slide in units. I love them, but finding someone to plan and install them was tough. The final cost was less than putting in gas or electric HVAC – barely. Still, when I get solar panels, my bill should dive to nearly zero, and I won’t be burning fossil fuels so many others up here.
This will be the library/drawing room with great views and an Ikea fold out futon that is a little too short and hard for my taste, unfortunately.
To tie the eco-inspired look together, I cast local plants in air-dry clay and hung them above the windows. Finding the right material took weeks, as plaster just cracks, plaster of Paris is toxic and firing clay takes a lot of energy. Luckily, airdry clay is fine so long as items don’t get wet.
The master bedroom has an attached bath. I don’t have a bed in there yet because I won’t do that until I move permanently, but for guests I have a good quality air mattress which can be pumped up with an electric plug. Also I designed this bedroom lamp from a natural pine bow. In the bathroom, I created faux fossils from clay and put them above the shower and I hand cut a stencil from a photo I had taken for the wall pattern. I’m experimenting with sustainable cork bath mats, but I don’t know if I like them yet.
Kern River and Sequoia National forest are only minutes away from my property. I went rafting with my friend Julia’s family in June
and caught this photo of a fearless deer in May.
The economy is rural with an emphasis on camping and family tourism. Here are a couple of local restaurants with great views. My friend Helen and her sister Beth were the first to visit me
at the restored house.
Inner tube fun and amazing natural hot springs are also about 20 minutes away. I’ll tell my story of a “close call” near the “Killer Kern,” at another time.
Here’s a local ghost town and a horse who goes undercover as a
Holstein cow.
Even the garbage dump is scenic. Seriously, this is where I bring my trash.
A few of the plants in my high desert yard. The yellow one is a native gourd.
Last December, I snipped some of the juniper branches from the trees on my land to make this wreath. You may notice right at the top, there’s a sprig of mistletoe. That too was growing wild on my property.
More than a retirement home and game preserve, I hope this place will be a legacy for my son, either financially or as a place to rest
between jobs as a cinematographer. Repairing nature is something we owe our kids.