Happy Valentine's Day!

Ideas for living in a rustic cabin. Susan stays at Lakeview Cottages at Huntington Lake, California. The cabins were built in 1913 when the Edison Electric Company was developing its hydroelectric power system in the Central Sierra Nevada. The cabins are within 100 yards of the lake and take their inhabitants back to a simpler, relaxing way of life.
Happy Valentine's Day!
Posted by Susan at 9:24 PM 1 comments
Labels: fishing
Merry Christmas to all our friends and family! This has been a busy time of visiting with relatives and friends. Both daughters were in town, and with boyfriends, there was a revolving door of comings and goings! After retrieving some boxes from storage at another house, we did get some decorating done. Now that we've downsized houses (done before the girls returned home), we don't have room for the tall, large diameter tree of Christmasses past.
Posted by Susan at 12:56 PM 4 comments
When you visit Lakeview Cottages, you get a cute vintage cabin in a fabulous setting. The cabins have personality and are clean, but are very simple. The guests make the cabins their own for the week or two weeks they are mountain cabin dwellers. Some guys come up to the lake, throw their sleeping bags on the made up beds, fill the refrigerators with prepared food, then hit the lake for 24/7 fishing. Other residents really move in - with wall hangings, special dishes and appliances, rugs and lamps! It is fun to see the cabins take on the personalities of each current guest.
Being simple cabins, there is not much furniture or storage. There might be a bedside shelf, but no bedside table. Since I like a place for my book, reading light and other necessities, I set out to find a bedside table that could multi-task, be inexpensive, rustic, and not take up lots of room in my car. My solution is borrowed from my college days when everything I owned fit in a '62 VW bug. Crates are great! You can pack them, then at the destination, unload them and stack them into shelves. Since they're used for carrying supplies they take no extra room in the car. My college age daughter combines them with 1x12 boards to create longer shelves. The crates in the top photo are from Michael's. These crates are a little sturdier than the ones sold at Joann's.
Posted by Susan at 7:32 PM 4 comments
Labels: accessories, packing
Posted by Susan at 8:50 AM 5 comments
Labels: accessories, lights, porch
So we're driving up to the lake early this morning. It was a beautiful morning and had been two long weeks since we had been to Lakeview. George says to me, "I love the mountains!" Thinking of a common (to us) camp song, I reply, " I love the rolling hills!" We couldn't think of the next line, but we both remembered the fourth line: I love the daffodills, and of course the refrain: boom de ada, boom de ada.... and we were off singing the round as we drove up the four lane!
Campfire songs are a big part of our history. George used to play the guitar and sing with the campers up the hill at Camp Keola. I remember the songs I learned in Girl Scouts, then sang at church camp when I was nine. There's something about a group of people gathered around the campfire singing songs together. Sometimes the "play list" is structured, sometimes it's just whoever can remember the words, leads.
What makes a song, a campfire song? I cherished my campfire songbook from my youth, but, like my youth, it has disappeared. When my kids were little I bought the Wee Sing Around the Campfire book & tape (now its called sing-a-longs). I looked up campfire songs with a Google search and found a list of 50 songs - few of which I considered "campfire songs." So what is a campfire song?
The words need to be known by most of us, or they need to be easy to learn. Generally the song needs to be accompanied by the guitar - which means basic chords. While sometimes we accompany with the harmonica, that's hard to play and sing at the same time. I soon realized there are different categories of campfire songs - usually based on the group of campers. There are scout camps, church camps, mixed age general publilc camps, same age camps. So, if you'll help me, let's make some lists of all time favorite campfire songs. Please make a comment, and if I know it, I will add your song to the list.
Scout Songs: Ash Grove, Kookaburra, Kum Ba Yah, White Coral Bells, Taps,
Basics: Clementine, Down In the Valley, I've Been Working on the Railroad, Oh, Susanna, Reuben & Rachel, She'll Be Comin Round the Mountain, Swing Low Sweet Chariot
Rounds: The More We Get Together, Make New Friends, One Bottle of Pop, Boom de ada, Row Your Boat, Sarasponda, The More We Get Together,
Folk Songs: The Hammer Song, Where Have All the Flowers Gone?, Puff the Magic Dragon, Michael, Row the Boat Ashore,
Church Camp: Rocka My Soul, He's Got the Whole World, I Lean, Arky Arky, Three Jolly Fishermen, Love Love, It Only Takes a Spark, They'll Know We are Christians by Our Love, River of Life, Dem Bones
Silly Songs: Sippin Cider Through a Straw, The Boarding House
70's: Anything John Denver (Grandma's Feather Bed)
Whoa! This list is going to take a while! I can just hear Keola Lifeguard, Art singing all these fun songs. I can even hear the campers shouting out "Arky, Arky!" It makes me smile and brings back such great memories. So, the next time you're by the campfire, why not suggest a song? It will bring the group together (hopefully) and be one of the highlights of your camping trip.
Posted by Susan at 6:56 PM 2 comments
Labels: Camp Keola, campfire, campfire songs, songs
Posted by Susan at 5:53 PM 1 comments
Labels: accessories, lights, pull chains, sockets
No microwave, no coffee maker, no hairdryer, no TV…. What kind of life is this? A return to the “dark” ages? To me it is a relaxing vacation in a cabin that was built in 1913. It doesn’t mean that I don’t have light or electricity. It does mean that I don’t have so many lights and that there is only one electrical outlet in each room of the cabin. It also means that if everyone has their microwaves going at the same time, the cabin at the end of the line may experience a “brown out.” It also means that I get to try some things I haven’t done in awhile. It means that I can show my children the way we used to do things at Grandpa’s house.
Most of us in our 50’s and older remember our first microwave. For me it was entertainment – we “exploded” hot dogs in it. Now it’s a standard fixture in our kitchens and offices. Can we cook without it while we’re on vacation? How will we pop our popcorn? How will we heat up water? I love Lakeview’s three burner gas ranges. First thing in the morning I get a pot of hot water going on the burner. That heat takes the chill off the kitchen and gives me ready water for tea and drip coffee. I love using my big griddle over two burners to make pancakes. Have your kids ever seen you pop popcorn on the stove top, shaking the pan back and forth?
Maybe this vacation is the time to show them! Need a cake for a birthday celebration? Try the “Easy Bake” range top oven shown in this blog. Out at Lakeview’s outdoor cooking station there is a range top oven that works very well – feel free to give it a try. Another advantage to not bringing electric kitchen appliances to the mountains is that I have more room on my kitchen counter!
My family loves to cook at the campfire every evening. Cooking fish outdoors is easy and doesn’t leave any odors in the cabin. Whenever we have our campfire going, I like to bake our potatoes in the fire – oil them, salt them, wrap them in aluminum foil. We generally wrap up sliced vegetables, add butter, onion and seasonings and place them in the fire too. Do you remember “hobo meals” from your scouting days? What a great way for the kids to help with dinner preparation.
I also have more room in the bathroom because I leave my hair dryer and curling iron at home. The mountain air is very dry and it takes no time for my hair to dry. I am on vacation – so no curls in my hair. Bad hair day? That’s what caps are for. As an added bonus, the hat keeps the sun off your face.
There is electricity in the Lakeview cabins. There is even an outlet, but you may need to look for it. The two bedroom cabins have an outlet in the light socket of the bedrooms. I do recommend that you bring an extension cord ( or two). I love to sew at The Cottages.