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Our 1891 Linden Lane Farm

the spyder

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I figured I should eventually post in here. Back in the early 90's my parents purchased the property my brother, wife, and son currently live on. Both my brother and I grew up here for the better part of our childhood, went to college, moved away, and then somehow found ourselves moving back home. Our parents moved for my fathers job and asked me to move back and take care of the property. My brother, unable to find a job out of school, moved back home with me to help.

The property was started in the mid 1860's. At this point, the first building was constructed. The middle section of the now expanded barn/shop still stands, along with 90% of the original structures. The house was finished in 1891, along with 8 other total buildings on the property. The property is 5 acres overlooking the Willamette River here in Oregon. The buildings consist of 1) The Main House 2) Summer Kitchen 3) Shop 4) Well tower 5) Laundry House 6) Fesant House 7) Beagle House, 8) Bee House, 9) Walnut Dryer.

The fellow who built the property planted mixed walnut trees and had the entire property covered with bee hives. Sadly we are now having to remove the cross bread walnuts, as they rot out in the center. The limbs dangle dangerously above buildings and must be cut down. We are replanting what we can. 40% of the property is covered by Ivy, oh how I hate Ivy... We are hoping to knock it down, along with the blackberries, this spring.

The list of projects is overwhelming. 100+ year old buildings need constant attention. Currently we have some major issue with 4 of the buildings. The worse is 4) Well Tower. We have rebuilt it once already, but now the water damage is so bad on the NW exposure, the siding is falling off. Inside the building are puddles of water. The next is 8) Bee House. Its falling down a hill, literally. Next is 2) and 3). Both buildings are having structural overload issues. Sagging timbers due to deteriorating rock foundations are causing leaks and interior damage.

Anything we do has to last another 100 years. Many things must match existing and worst of all, its being done on one heck of a budget.

Attached are general property photos.
 

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the spyder

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Now, the reason I am posting this here is we developed a plan of attack. Some of the first things happening will be laying the grounds for a new shop. Why? Many reasons. First, by clearing behind the existing shop, we can move our driveway. We currently have a 13.5" wide entrance gateway that's a hair over 12ft tall, and just barley clears our trailers. This will let me rework the driveway, parking, and let us reorganize our cars. Second, by building a new shop, we can put our "classic cars" in the existing shop bays. Keeping them safe. Third, we will have a place to restore and maintain the cars without the risk of burning down a 150 year old structure.

Several of our buildings are full of lumber, the main being the Bee House. This has overloaded the foundation and allowed it to start to slide/shift down hill. This is needless to say, BAD. With a new shop, all of our equipment and tools will be moved from the existing. We will be building lumber racks in the center of the existing shop, removing the lumber from the Bee House, Fesant House, Well Tower, and Walnut dryer. This will let us start restoring those buildings.

Attached are some photos of our current shop.
 

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A_Pmech

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Quite a place you have there, Spyder!

What's the purpose of the tower?
 
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the spyder

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The idea for the new shop is below. Its simple, yet extremely complicated due to the logistics. I am planning for a 24x36, but was just asked a week ago what it would take to do a 30x50 (pictured). Permits, Power, and landscaping/prep are currently being worked out. We can not decide if we want to classify this as a permit-exempt AG building, then finish it later. Or as a Pole Barn/Garage. My neighbor did a large 30x40 using a AG exempt permit with no issues. I am going to call our local building code office and ask some theoretical questions.


Currently, I am waiting for the weather to let up so I can fall 2 60-80ft tall trees. I have cut down 5 large (10" round) and a few dozen 3" trees behind the existing shop. We are looking at buying a small tractor, seeing as there is quite a bit of work to be done with a scraper blade, back hoe, bucket, and tiller.

Wish me luck. I will upload some proposed site pictures tomorrow.

:beer:
 

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the spyder

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Quite a place you have there, Spyder!

What's the purpose of the tower?

You will enjoy this. The property had pressurized water and a methane gas plant. The well tower houses a 50ft well and a 500 gallon water barrel at the top. A donkey engine was used to pump water to the top, using gravity to provide pressurized water across the property. The methane gas plant provided light in every building and every entrance. There are dozens of random cool things around here, some real turn of the century ingenuity.

When we moved in, the last owner was a contractor. He did a ton of work on the main house, shop, and several foundations. He however did not like wiring... There is still Knob and Tube powering the lights in the downstairs of the main house. Until 10 years ago, Knob and Tube was feeding overhead powerwires to the outbuildings. When I was 10-12 I learned very quickly with my uncle how to wire a house, then applied the knowledge to our own house. I wired our shop when I was 14 with a 30 amp main, 12-2, 20 amp plug circuits, and wired the summer house. Sadly I am redoing much of it, mostly out of necessity. The existing shop is getting a 125amp sub panel this spring, which will feed a 100amp sub panel in the new shop. Or we will get a separate service.

I could spend $30k in a heartbeat on this property, just to start the rehab process, without blinking. Not my money though.
 
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the spyder

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More random photos. Only ones I have online ATM. This is from several years back. We are slowly painting everything white.

1+2 Beehouse
3 68 Buick with vista cruiser glass + 65 corvair- Shop/House/Summer Kitchen/Laundry House/Fesant House.
4 Entrance
5) Model T I was given when I was 9.
6) 42 Packard
6) Looking up from the hill at the shop, well tower, laundry house.
 

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A_Pmech

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Ahhh! I was wondering where the windmill was... Don't need one with Methane! Nice building! :)

Sounds like whoever built your place had a little money burning a hole in his pocket about 1890!

I would check with your power company before deciding on a second service. My power co-op will do a service revision for free, but a new service is $3,000.

Sounds like you have enough to keep you busy for a while. This place is an old land grant farm, but the structures have been neglected far too long. I'm going to enjoy driving a bulldozer though here to make room for shop 2.0. :bounce:


You will enjoy this. The property had pressurized water and a methane gas plant. The well tower houses a 50ft well and a 500 gallon water barrel at the top. A donkey engine was used to pump water to the top, using gravity to provide pressurized water across the property. The methane gas plant provided light in every building and every entrance. There are dozens of random cool things around here, some real turn of the century ingenuity.

When we moved in, the last owner was a contractor. He did a ton of work on the main house, shop, and several foundations. He however did not like wiring... There is still Knob and Tube powering the lights in the downstairs of the main house. Until 10 years ago, Knob and Tube was feeding overhead powerwires to the outbuildings. When I was 10-12 I learned very quickly with my uncle how to wire a house, then applied the knowledge to our own house. I wired our shop when I was 14 with a 30 amp main, 12-2, 20 amp plug circuits, and wired the summer house. Sadly I am redoing much of it, mostly out of necessity. The existing shop is getting a 125amp sub panel this spring, which will feed a 100amp sub panel in the new shop. Or we will get a separate service.

I could spend $30k in a heartbeat on this property, just to start the rehab process, without blinking. Not my money though.
 
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the spyder

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There is a rather strange story that goes along with the fellow who built it. He was a ship jumper, no money, was headed to a work camp. Yet he built this and when he died, he supposedly had money that was never found. Enough money that we have photos of people in the 30's, standing around with shovels digging up every inch of the property. Its supposedly never been found...

Did I mention I am investing in a metal detector?
 

gonzoengineer

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Groveland, FL
Very cool Spyder, I was wondering if you were ever going to post up about your very unique shop/property.

I always thought it had charm from the pics in your various RX threads from days gone by. Are you planning to maintain the current entryway to the property and just modify it to provide more clearance or replace it all together?
 

bazzateer

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Watford, Great Britain
Or "Feasant" house......can you tell us something more about them?

That might be an alternative spelling of 'pheasant'? Somewhere they are hung prior to plucking and preparing for eating?

I'm not the pheasant plucker, I'm the pheasant plucker's mate,
And I'm only plucking pheasants 'cause the pheasant plucker's late.
I'm not the pheasant plucker, I'm the pheasant plucker's son,
And I'm only plucking pheasants till the pheasant pluckers come.

Try saying that after a few beers!
 

rickairmedic

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louisville ,Ky
great place, can you tell me what a summer kitchen is?


I think I can answer that one . A summer kitchen would have been used for cooking durring the summer to keep from heating up the main house . Usually an outbuilding close to the main house.


Rick
 
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the spyder

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I think I can answer that one . A summer kitchen would have been used for cooking durring the summer to keep from heating up the main house . Usually an outbuilding close to the main house.


Rick

It also housed a wood working shop in the upstairs, the methane plant, and the down stairs was 1/2 open for firewood storage. Its now remodeled.

The Bee House literally housed dozens of Bee Hives.
The Pheasant house is where they raised Pheasants.
The Walnut dryer is rather neat. In the basement is a large stove. Heat is then columned up thought the roof. On its way, it passes through racks of Walnuts, or anything to dry. Its a giant food dehydrator.
 
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the spyder

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That might be an alternative spelling of 'pheasant'? Somewhere they are hung prior to plucking and preparing for eating?

I'm not the pheasant plucker, I'm the pheasant plucker's mate,
And I'm only plucking pheasants 'cause the pheasant plucker's late.
I'm not the pheasant plucker, I'm the pheasant plucker's son,
And I'm only plucking pheasants till the pheasant pluckers come.

Try saying that after a few beers!

I couldnt spell last night :(

:lol_hitti
 
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the spyder

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It has been a long time since I have done that...

Moved on to these :)
 

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Bevis

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Moore Haven, Florida
will be watching this thread. Several years ago, my wife and I almost bought a Sears and Roebuck home here in our community. The man that had it was the son or nephew of the original owner. They bought the house as a kit from sears and had it shipped on a barge to town. They then went into town with horses and wagons to get the house and erect it. It was a 1900's house, and big barn.
 

Commodore

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Oregon
I am on my brothers account-
Today we got the quote for 2 trees to be removed and 1 trimmed. $6600. Holy ****. I thanked the arborist for his time and promptly went chain saw shopping. We have a 025 Stihl with a small 18" bar, but some of our walnuts are 28-42" round.

Sooo I found this:
http://portland.craigslist.org/wsc/for/1561695709.html
Going to take a look at it, figure that we will trim up the trees as best we can.
 

930dreamer

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I removed a walnut tree at my Moms house in the 1980's. I topped it and continued down, the last third didn't go as planned. A section landed on the powerlines with me in the tree, a fire ensued. I still have the fire department notice from The Register Guard Newspaper. The days of my youth.:)
 

A_Pmech

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That's a nice saw. Stihl's always struck me as a heavy saw, but they have a good reputation for longevity.

Needless to say, be careful!

:thumbup:
 
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the spyder

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I removed a walnut tree at my Moms house in the 1980's. I topped it and continued down, the last third didn't go as planned. A section landed on the powerlines with me in the tree, a fire ensued. I still have the fire department notice from The Register Guard Newspaper. The days of my youth.:)

Funny you should mention that... We had to fall 12 Fir trees today along the road. 8 went down with no problems, but the last started to fall to the road... I just about died. Thankfully we had a rope on it, my brother and I put ALL our weight on the rope and pulled it back. Always do a slanted back cut, it saved my *** today. Oh, I forgot to mention there were power lines 6ft behind it... :lol_hitti
 

jeff51

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The Palouse
Very cool place! I live on an old farm (although most of it is about 30 years newer) so I know about funky outbuildings and farmer construction...

BTW, if you can afford to cut the walnut into fairly long lengths, you might be able to sell it to woodworker types. It's hard to find a big piece of walnut these days.
 
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the spyder

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Very cool place! I live on an old farm (although most of it is about 30 years newer) so I know about funky outbuildings and farmer construction...

BTW, if you can afford to cut the walnut into fairly long lengths, you might be able to sell it to woodworker types. It's hard to find a big piece of walnut these days.

Sadly these walnuts were cross bred english and black walnut mix. The cores rot out and are no good for wood working. We do have 1 good black walnut, the rest are blighted.
 

Stuart in MN

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Today we got the quote for 2 trees to be removed and 1 trimmed. $6600. Holy ****. I thanked the arborist for his time and promptly went chain saw shopping.

Depending on where the trees are located, that may be a good price...I had a hyge maple removed a couple years ago that was hanging over my house and the neighbor's house; it would have been a hell of a job to do myself, and if anything had fallen the wrong way it would have been on their insurance policy and not mine. :)
 
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the spyder

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Sadly I am the type of bloke who would rather gather the friends, spend the money on a new chainsaw, the rental for a boom truck, and a pole saw, and end up doing it myself :)
 

Skyline

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Sadly I am the type of bloke who would rather gather the friends, spend the money on a new chainsaw, the rental for a boom truck, and a pole saw, and end up doing it myself :)

Tree work can be pretty dangerous. Be careful.
 
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