Showing posts with label Our cabin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Our cabin. Show all posts

Oct 24, 2021

It's Fall at the Cabin Again!

There are so many things to love about fall in the mountains.


I never get tired of this view as we crest the hill on the way to our cabin. It always thrills me!



And I still get a rush from the first view of our cabin through the trees.



I love how long the fall mums last in the cool mountain air.



And how fall and summer mingle on our entryway coat hooks until the last summer things get packed away.



It's not quite cool enough to pack up the summer pillows and throw.


But little by little the warmth of fall finds its way into the cabin.



In thick red curtains to keep the chill at bay.



In the warmth of a morning fire.



A sprinkle of soft felt leaves.



Small glowing pumpkins.



Fluffy Autumn mums.



Football games on the TV.



And painting inside where it's warm.



But the very best part of fall in the mountains is the mountains.






















Every year its beauty takes my breath away once again.







Dec 14, 2020

A Tiny Cabin Christmas

Happy Holidays and welcome to our tiny cabin! 

Today, I'm bringing you some snowy cheer and sharing our holiday decor. 


Our downtown McCall holiday tree.








We bought our inexpensive little fake tree and some shiny ornaments a few years ago at our local drugstore. It's become a tradition for us to only use these decorations here because they don't take up much room and they fit snugly in one cardboard box for storage in our tiny cabin shed. 

And, somehow, they just seem to be suitable for our little 1950's retro cabin!





Our primitive hand carved bear bookends are from a local antique shop.


















Last summer we made a mantle for our fireplace. We love the coziness! 















I sewed our red flannel reindeer pillows with handmade pom poms years and years ago. They seemed to fit right in at our little cabin.



We look forward to making our bed with these snuggly Pottery Barn sheets from a few years ago each winter when it snows. 



This cute bear block print is a treasured gift made by my daughter when she was in college.













We're so glad you came to visit today, and we hope the rest of your winter is cozy and warm!





Jun 4, 2019

Spring at our Cabin

We've been spending most of our spring weekends up in the mountains at our cabin. 


Driving up to and back from the cabin is always a treat because the beautiful landscape is always changing. Spring comes to the mountains of Idaho much later than it does in the high desert of Boise. When it finally does arrive, it seems like the brown winter meadows turn emerald green almost overnight.
  

This was the view from our car window on a recent early spring morning.  
A full moon glows over the snow that's still frosting the mountain tops, and the misty fog is drifting over the lakes and through the lowlands. Soon the meadows will be the summer pasture to thousands of grazing cows. 
  

Every spring there's a thrill to arriving at the cabin to see the last drift of snow has finally melted from our driveway. 


Just like in the mountain meadows there's an explosion of new green growth all around our property. One of my favorites spots is this corner of the driveway where these soft little green plants spill over the rocks, and I just can't make myself cut them back. One of my goals this year is to learn the names of the wildflowers growing all around us. 


The mountain ash might be my very favorite native Idaho mountain tree. They get creamy white flower clusters in the spring and have bright red berries in the fall. This one next to our cabin was almost dead when we moved in with just a few withered leaves hanging on. I watered it twice a month last summer, hoping to bring it back. Our deep winter snow knocked it completely to the ground and covered it, and then my husband walked on top of it while he was shoveling snow away from our windows. I thought for sure it would be a goner, but here it is reaching for the sun and half covered with leaves and even tiny flower buds! This is one tough little tree, which makes me love it even more!


We only had one bloom last spring from dozens of daffodils we planted the fall before. This year almost every one bloomed, so this fall we'll add lots more. Now that I know they will thrive here under the trees, I aim to plant drifts of them.


These pretty little low growing white wildflowers are one of those I hope to identify this year. Anyone know what it is?


The return of birdsong is one of the best parts of spring in the mountains.


We've been super busy for the past two weekends planting new plants and trees all around the cabin. I hope to share more of them in another blog post. For now, here's a first glimpse of the new plants on the sunny south side of the cabin facing our fire pit area. We're starting out slowly to make sure the plants we've chosen will survive here before we add more.


Spring has been so welcome here where we had such an enormous, almost overwhelming, snowfall last winter. We were so happy and surprised to see that, as each new snow drift melted away, all the trees and bushes we planted last fall survived and are thriving. With each passing season we love our little cabin even more!