When the last of our kids left home, we started looking to downsize our living arrangements. We have always been avid nature lovers, and having lived in the city since the 70’s, we were looking for a little more elbow room. We spent about a year of Sunday drives looking for a likely place to call home.
We purchased just under five acres. The property was last actively farmed in the 1930’s as a pig farm, and is bounded on the north and east with 60’ red pines. The remaining ground has filled in over the intervening years with elm, maple, oak, black cherry, red pine, white pine, scotch pine, cedar, jack pine, and sassafras. We have a couple of nice stands of staghorn sumac, and a surfeit of autumn olive which seems to have found ideal growing conditions.
The previous owners had cleared a large area in the center of the lot which is in native meadow grasses and flowers. We have a few invasive species that we will weed out over time including Canadian goldenrod, knapweed, and the autumn olive. We do have wild strawberries, thimbleberries, big bluestem, poison ivy, and purple love grass which leaves a purple/blue haze over the meadow when in seed.
Among the fauna we have seen: a dozen deer swarming the site, the eagle pair, an osprey, many songbirds, fox, woodchuck, the mother of all raccoons, a small skunk, rabbit, and several frogs, turtles and snakes.
This only brings us to the why. This site location defies every other instinct for sustainable building. We will no longer enjoy the assault of city noises, or light pollution. We will be located about four miles out of a small town with all of the requisite life support services. We will not experience any greater commuting time than what we had as city residents.
We will also be installing a large garden and perhaps failing miserably as farmers, but we both have a hankering to get our fingers dirty. I figure the critters get a share, we get a share, and anything else we produce in excess of our needs we will send to the food bank.
Which brings us to the topic of chickens and goats. I half jokingly mentioned to my wife that I would like chickens and goats. The goats to keep the grass mowed, and the chickens for pest control, eggs, and soil amendments. I inserted images of them on some early building elevations, and they refuse to go away much to my wife’s horror. The land is zoned Rural Agricultural, and as such we are entitled to retain 4 cows, 4 horses, 9 pigs, 9 sheep, 9 goats, and 97 chickens. She is sure we will just be baiting in the local carnivores. I will keep you posted.
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