|
The living room side of the greatroom. |
Before I proceed with the video tour inside our float cabin home, here's an overview.
Our cabin is the third John built, so it's called Cabin #3. It's small enough (675 sqft) to easily maintain but large enough not to be cramped.
First Floor
The first floor has the most living space (500 sqft). There are two small bedrooms (7'x10'), one for guests (which we rarely get) and one for storage. We keep a week's supply of firewood (
Wood Storage Shelf Construction) in the guest room. That's especially handy in winter.
|
Sink with hand pump and propane fridge. |
Downstairs is greatroom style.
The kitchen with propane appliances is on one side and the living room with a woodstove on the other. We have a portable TV for
Internet streaming. It's compact and functional.
|
Compost toilet, tub and storage. |
In 2011 we
added an indoor bathroom off the guest room to
replace our outhouse four flights of stairs up the granite cliff. This one change to our cabin made full-time living much easier.
Second Floor
|
The loft master bedroom with a king bed and view. |
The second floor is a
sleeping loft. Two twin beds together make a king. The loft and high ceiling over the living room make the cabin feel spacious. A window high on the opposite wall gives us a captivating view of Goat Island.
If we had more space it would feel like work to keep it clean and maintained. If you are planning on building or purchasing a cabin, think about that. Bigger isn't always better.
Come back next week for the next installment of the video tour. See all that we can do in a kitchen with just 130 square feet. -- Margy