Layout:
Home > Farmette tour pt 1 (very long)

Farmette tour pt 1 (very long)

October 5th, 2007 at 03:04 am

I know you are curious, so as threatened, pictures of the farmette. These are shots of the house and barn. Warning - long, long, long, with lots o' pictures.

House - facing west. This is the side facing the barn, which we will see later. The foundation got recently fixed.


House - facing east. This is the side facing the garden and the property now owned by the Wisconsin Dept of Natural Resources. We'll see that later, too. We never ever used that porch.


This is the north side of the barn and the now fixed up milkhouse. The red barn door is now new, and there aren't many diamond windows around on barns these days. The house would be behind you and to your left.


Inside of the old shed on the east side of the barn - all you would do is take a few steps to the left of the previous picture. This old, 20 ft shed contained the old, copper-bottomed still my grandfather (father's side) used to make whiskey during Prohibition.


This is the south side of the barn. The barn is actually in the shape of an upside down U - The milk cows were generally led in the central courtyard before milking and went there during rainstorms. Nowadays, the solar panel stands proud on the left. Its generating power - kind of fun watching the inverter go in reverse, sending power back to the utility.


Close up of the three poles. We installed three poles in case sister and I wanted to install two more solar panels. Under the three poles lay a trenched copper cable which delivers the power to the farmette. In the background, the southwest corner of the house is peaking through the trees.


Close up shot of the back end of the solar panel.


Close up of the courtyard where the cows lay. The flooring - ahem, compost - is like scotch: very well aged.


This is the south west corner of the barn. That little blue-green thingee sticking out is the automatic manure spreader - how cow manure got out of the barn.


Grounds and fields next.

4 Responses to “Farmette tour pt 1 (very long)”

  1. denisentexas Says:
    1191557255

    Wow, thanks for sharing those! The house is beautiful!

  2. Thrifty Ray Says:
    1191557961

    Rich in history Im sure. Gorgeous!!

  3. (: joy :) Says:
    1191600638

    when we heard about your grandma, we were all thinking about you. now, with all these beautiful pictures that you shared, you were thinking about us. thanks for sharing this with us; i could smell the barn and imagine petting the kitty. glad you're home and safe.

  4. LuxLiving Says:
    1218990447

    I'm just now catching up on your blog - these are pictures of an era almost gone - and you can see what hardworkers lived here! Reminds me of home and our family farm where my Dad still lives. Mucking brown gold out of a barn? Priceless for building character! And a chore I used to slip away to read up in a heavily leafed tree to avoid. Smile

Leave a Reply

(Note: If you were logged in, we could automatically fill in these fields for you.)
*
Will not be published.
   

* Please spell out the number 4.  [ Why? ]

vB Code: You can use these tags: [b] [i] [u] [url] [email]