Those would be some very large Cutt's - I put my money on Rainbow's.awesome pictures...what more could you ask for in life? love the trout as well, but they look like cutthroats to me
all i can say is wow.After a tour of duty in Viet Nam as a Combat Medic, I returned to a US that I didn't fit in. So I decided to go live off the land.
I was discharged from Ft Lewis Washington in 1970. I had inherited enough from my grandparents to buy 40 acres of forest land in NE Washington state. Right on the Canadian border. He are a few of the pictures I could find of the log cabin I built in the forest.
These pictures were taken in 1971-72-73.
Cut all the logs myself & peeled them. The was no electricity, 4 weel drive road 5miles to get there. I did haul in some milled lumber, but all of the logs came from the land. Built everything without a crane or any power equipment, all done with rigging & block&tackle. You can see it in the pictures. I did use a gas chain saw.
I thought I was 'Jeremiah Johnson'! lol!
Raised our own food, hogs, chickens, garden, wild game
You could buy all the private land in that county & you would only own 3%! It was 97% Colville National Forest & Colville Indian Reservation land.
You could walk from the cabin about 20 miles into Canada before you got to a road.
peace
doublejj
P.S. I'll post some comments between the pictures.
Peeling logs:
First layers of logs:
What a pair!lol!
If you look close you can see me at the lower left:
The creek about a mile behind the cabin had rainbow trout like this:
I case you thought I was a cowboy with 'all hat and no cattle'. Here's 'Rosie' our milk cow! lol!
Learned to hunt deer with a bow:
Caught this boy in the pig pen, (going after the hog feed actually), but the hogs didn't know that! 30/06!
give me a few more harvest to finance and buy the land and all the parts and i'm in. i would love to do something like that.I sold it in 1980. A wealthy rancher in the area bought it as a gift for his daughter who lived in Seattle. They were using it as a vacation cabin the last I heard, maybe 10 years ago. It's an awesome area for snowmobiles & cross country skiing in the winter. They improved the road so it's not 4 wheel drive any more, you can drive a car to the cabin. They also brought elect in. But they don't live there year around.
I'm sure biulding the cabin & subsistance living like we did, helped me clear out a lot of baggage I had to get rid of.
It was just what the dr ordered at the time. Doing something like this will test your character. I needed to feel successfull
I actually toyed around with teaching a 'log cabin building class' at one time. Anybody wants to build a log cabin in the wilderness, hit me up. I had never built anything before I did that, I had to learn how to do everything, teach it, & do it, all at the same time. There were sooo many obsticles to overcome, things I never thought of.
In the old days this was common place, a right of passage for young men to go out & challange themselves & survive on their own.
The main ridgepole going down the middle was 40' long, 18" around and probably weighed 1000 lbs. Imagine lifting that log & setting it on top of 3 support poles, 28ft in the air! You could really hear the rigging groan as we got it to the top! I had a pucker factor of 10!
You'll more sense of accomplishment from building a cabin, than you will ever get from any college course.
Come on guy's, get out there & challange life!
I'll conduct an on-line distance learning, log cabin class, free
peace
doublejj
peace
doublejj