Welcome to American Way Farm
Way "up nawth" in northern NH, where the snowdrifts are big enough to have their own zip codes, life on the farm comes with equal parts work, wonder, and comic relief. I’m Sandy Davis—farmer, storyteller, and frequent victim of livestock with too much personality. Here’s where I share the true (and mostly true) tales of everyday life on American Way Farm—the moments that inspired my book Between the Fenceposts.

Monday, January 19, 2009

More Before and After Pix: Deck Rails, Paint, and Perspective

Before:

Alright, as promised, here are some before and after shots of the house exterior. Don’t all start clapping at once—we haven’t done a ton yet, but we have made a few improvements. First off, we finally finished the railing on the deck, so now you can lean on it without risking a spontaneous trust fall into the yard. We also said goodbye to the unfortunate cinnamon-pinkish color (which looked like sunburned bologna) and painted it a respectable dark brown. And we’ve started enclosing the farmer’s porch to turn it into a 3-season porch—though I don’t have updated pictures of that part yet. I’ll share those in the spring, when the porch stops being a wind tunnel of doom.

Now, the second picture still shows a lot of work that needs doing. Yes, it’s a mess. No, I don’t want to talk about it. Just squint and pretend it looks finished.

Also, please don’t let the photos fool you—the house looks massive in pictures, but it’s only 24' x 32'. Yep. We downsized on purpose. I know. Gone is the concept of walk-in closets and homes that require golf carts to get from the kitchen to the bathroom.

Downsizing has been… an adventure. I spent the first half of my life collecting stuff—antiques, furniture, decorative roosters, whatever caught my fancy. And now I’m spending the second half trying to offload it all without causing panic in my family thinking I'm giving away all my stuff because I might be dying (which I have no plans to do in the foreseeable future). One day, during a particularly aggressive decluttering spree, my oldest daughter actually looked at me like I’d just updated my will and asked, “Mom… are you dying?” Apparently, in her mind, giving away your stuff is the universal sign of impending doom.

I reassured her that I was fine—fit as a fiddle, mean as a snake, and nowhere near ready to kick the bucket. I’m just tired of dusting things I don’t even like anymore. Turns out, you can’t take it with you, and even if you could, who wants to spend the afterlife tangled in extension cords and music boxes that have lost their rewind spring long ago?

Anyway—enjoy the pictures, pretend we’re further along than we are, and feel free to ooh and ahh out loud. It makes me feel productive.

Enjoyed this tale from the barnyard?
Don’t miss the next round of critter chaos — subscribe here or follow on Facebook.

🐑 If this story made you smile, please click one of the gray share buttons below instead of copy-paste—it helps folks find their way back here for more tales from the farm.🐓

Sandy signature image

©2009 Sandy Davis | American Way Farm

3 comments:

Shelley said...

I've been trying to get rid of stuff too! I always think of what the comedienne George Carlin always said "a house is just a place to put your stuff."

Andrea said...

Love it.
We are downsizing too.
It is somehow liberating.

Farmhouse Blessings said...

We live in a small home too! We had a choice of a big house on a small lot .... or a small house with plenty of outdoors. We chose the latter ... and I've never missed all the stuff we've left behind.

Your place is lovely. That big window is a dream bringing the outdoors right into your living space. I love it!

Smiles,
Lea