A Barn to Salvage
January 3rd, 2012 § Leave a Comment
My husband and I have always wanted to live in a big open loft type space.
When we found ourselves with forty acres in the country on my family farm it felt like that dream might not be possible,
after all where do you find a big open loft in the country? We thought about it and decided we wanted a barn.
Wanting a barn and acquiring a barn are two very different things. I toyed with the idea in my head and would look on websites where people
could list their barns for sale; yes those do exist. The two I frequented most were Old Barn Wood and The Barn Pages. Many were too far away to be feasible.
I pushed my barn thoughts to the back of my head as my son started preschool and everyday life took over. One day I decided to look
for a log cabin on Craigslist that we could take down and rebuild. My father in law has a local museum with several log cabins he moved himself
so I knew we could do it with a little help. What luck we found one! We called and made an appointment to look at it.
I got my hopes up! I was so excited. My husband Andy and I and my Father in Law waded through tall
weeds and overgrown brambles to reach the cabin. It was beautiful. It was big. It was unfortunately mostly rotten. The logs at the bottom were
definitely rotten. The ones in the back where a previous kitchen attachment had been years ago had been leaked on for so long they were
beyond help. We still ventured inside to look around. Even at this point my dreamer brain was still hopeful that we could fix it.
The inside was strewn with 1940′s furniture that must have been beautiful at one time. It was as if the previous occupant just
decided to leave one day and left all their belongings behind. My father in law started up the shaky stairs to the second floor.
Up there on the landing tucked in the corner was a baby buzzard; even a baby buzzard is by no means small. We figured that
we had better head on out of there because where there’s a baby there’s probably a mother too. My father in law told us
that one of the cabins he had taken down for his museum also had buzzard occupants. I guess buzzards like cabins too.
I was sad but we talked it over in the car on the way home and it slowly sunk in that there was no saving that cabin without
replacing almost all of the logs. I’m not sure what happened to it, I will have to drive by and peek sometime to see if it’s still there holding
it’s historic place in the woods or if it’s been lost to the bulldozer or burnt down.
After I got home I was so disappointed. On a whim I decided to look on the old barn websites and see what was new.
There it was. A barn that was literally right down the road. It was meant to be I thought. What are the chances that I would find that barn. I was told
by the owner that we were the first ones who called about it. Apparently just in time, people from as far away as Arkansas wanted to come and take it down for
the wood; did I mention he didn’t want any money for it! We went to look at it a couple of days later and were blinded with the beauty of the
hand hewn beams cut with a broad axe from old growth forest long ago. The longest beam in the building was 40′ cut from one tree. It was
all pegged together as a proper timber frame should be with wooden pegs. It was gorgeous!
Now you might ask, why would anyone think a barn is gorgeous? Why would anyone want to turn a barn into a house?
Timber frame barns are gorgeous because they seep with history. They were made long ago by craftsmen using nothing but hand tools and
sweat labor. They are a true architectural art form. A barn would lend itself to the wide open spaces that my husband and I have always
desired in a home and we’re suckers for antiques and history. What could be more of an antique that a hand hewn beam cut from a possibly 200 or more
year old tree long ago? We were in love with the idea. Standing inside this massive 40′x60′ space humbled us some. The thought struck
us that we knew nothing about taking down a barn. I had spent my whole childhood on a farm and was in our tobacco barn all the time doing
various chores but we never had to do anything beyond repairing a piece of siding or fixing a leak in the roof. We were feeling a little
nervous, I could tell by the look on Andy’s face that maybe he was thinking we were in over our heads. About that time
the man who owned it asked if we thought we wanted it. Before we could reply my father in law said “Yes, we’ll take it.”
I thought, “Well, now we’re committed.” It’s been a lot of work and had some twists and turns
along the way but it’s been a lot of fun and a vast learning experience. I will add more to our story every few days. Stay tuned!




