kellan_the_tabby: Fieldless, a scallop shell per pale gules and azure. (badge)
[personal profile] kellan_the_tabby
20200825_174102

Not that there WAS anywhere to turn around, both sides stacked up with rocks like that. I can drive the van over a lot but she’s no four wheel drive jeep.

… with me & weird abandoned buildings.

I’ll get to that, though.

I keep looking for new places to spend the day. Shoulda turned around as soon as I saw how bad the road got, though.

I finally found a place with no rocks in the way & nearly got myself into another sort of trouble.

A bit of a clearing in the woods -- with a sea of mud at the center, & tire tracks leading partway through.

But I stopped before I got myself stuck — see, I CAN learn! — & turns out it was a pretty decent place to spend the day.

Seen through the trees, the van sits just off of the road, which runs behind it & off to the right.

I did my usual stuff — took a bunch of product pictures, made the big piece I posted about yesterday, hung out with the boys — & when everything else was done & the sun was getting low, went for a walk.

Seriously. What is it with me finding abandoned structures in these woods.

In the distance, the remains of an old log cabin. The roof & most of the walls have long since fallen and there's no more than a couple feet of wall still standing.

This one’s just an old, old log home though. I wonder how long it’s been there? It’s not a hogan — it was almost certainly built by white colonizers.

The corner of the cabin -- built in classic log cabin style, with treetrunks at least a foot wide stacked atop each other.

It was pretty big, for what it was. Sturdily built.

A view from the side, three walls still visible -- the house was perhaps sixteen feet by twenty.

Loiosh had to explore it, of course. But he didn’t want to go inside, just walked around the tumbledown walls.

Loiosh, an orange tabby wearing a green harness, stands atop what's left of one of the walls, looking curiously inside.

The sun was about to set so we all headed back — but I found a bit of treasure on the way. Check this out!

A short bit of iron pipe, well pitted & rusted. It's perhaps five inches long & maybe an inch & a half across.

A piece of pipe — nice thick walls, just that short length. No idea what it’s from, or if it’s related to the cabin — it was at least a hundred feet away.

I’ll make something out of it, though.


This was posted originally to my Patreon, a little over a week ago.

If you want to see these posts sooner, & not incidentally help support me & my cats in our travels & such, the way to do that is to sign up as one of my Patrons for as little as a buck a month.

I’d REALLY like that.


originally posted on Patreon; support me over there to see posts a week early!

Date: 2020-09-27 04:59 am (UTC)
corvi: (Default)
From: [personal profile] corvi
You go to the coolest places.

Date: 2020-09-27 01:23 pm (UTC)
siliconshaman: black cat against the moon (Default)
From: [personal profile] siliconshaman

Given the state of the logs, that has to have been abandoned for at least a hundred years, maybe as much as a hundred fifty (depending on local conditions) and nobody would put that much effort into a temporary structure meant to be disused after a few years, so it probably was in use for about as much before being left. So built mid-to-late 19th century, maybe early 20th.

Date: 2020-10-01 12:39 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] damont
For all that it's had long exposure to the weather, that abandoned cabin is in remarkably good shape.

(I've been keeping up with the Townsends video series on building an early 18th century Midwestern homestead, which started with a cabin not quite a year ago.)

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