Full Time Cabin Life

August 9, 2022, was our move-in date. After selling the home we’d just spent three years renovating, we moved to full time cabin life on Mt. Hood. From city dwellers to cabin dwellers, our dream of moving to the woods became a reality.

Goodbye to our king-size bed and his and her walk-in closets. Hello to sharing a 5′ wide reach-in and getting cozy on a smaller bed. How are we going to move 2500 square feet worth of stuff into an 1100 square foot, furnished cabin, we wondered. Short answer is, we didn’t. We got rid of a lot! Things we weren’t quite ready to part with got put into storage.

Cold and snowy outside; warm and cozy in!
Trillium Lake with Mt. Hood in the background. A short bike ride away from the cabin.

Creating our Full Time Cabin Lifestyle

We quickly settled into cabin life, spending late summer and fall doing maintenance on the cabin. Firewood was rotated in the woodshed, approximately 6 cords of wood were cut and stacked, preventative wildfire maintenance was done and the cabin paint was touched up.

Getting ready to rotate and restock the wood.

IIn the beginning, we started work first thing in the morning. The idea was that we would go for a walk or bike ride as a fun way to end our day. We soon realized that we rarely feel like going anywhere after a full day of work. So, we shifted our mindset and our timeline. Instead, we choose to begin our day with a fun, outdoor activity. We’re out of the cabin by 8:00 am for a bike ride to the lake or a hike on one of the many trails by our place.

King Porcini and Hawk’s Wings Mushrooms gathered on a morning hike. Next time we’ll just stick with the Porcinis.

Summer/Fall

A typical summer/fall morning looks like this: get up between 6:00 and 6:30 am, click on the lamps and press brew on the coffee maker (the best mornings always start the night before by getting the coffee maker prepped and ready!). Then, I sit at the kitchen table and write my morning pages. After writing, I move to my favorite cabin spot, the swivel chair by the window. Of course, I bring my second cup of coffee and a book with me. We then spend the next 45 minutes to an hour reading before heading out the door for whatever activity we decide on. Next summer we will write the names of trails we want to explore on scraps of paper and put them in a jar that we can pull from daily. I prepare breakfast after we get back from our morning adventure. Work starts after breakfast.

I loved watching the seasons change this year. Autumn was particularly beautiful.

Winter

A winter morning looks similar: up by 6:30, lights, coffee, writing, reading. The difference is we light a fire in the wood-burning stove (the cabin is around 57F when we get up in the morning). Between December and May we have about 3 feet of snow at a minimum outside (currently close to 6 feet!). Except for our daily outdoor adventure and a few cabin chores, everything we do is inside. Our daily outdoor chores consist of restocking firewood from the woodshed to the porch, shoveling snow away from the front windows and maintaining pathways from the cabin to the well-house and woodshed.

Man loading firewood into a sled.
Restocking the firewood for the cabin.
Do you see the front window? That’s what happens when we don’t shovel the snow!
Time to dig a path to the well house. A constant winter chore.

What Slow Living Actually Looks Like

Winter forced us to slow down. Initially, the idea of not being able to come and go easily worried me. We have to ski or snowshoe to our car to travel anywhere. But it turned out it was the permission I needed to just to do less.

Our main excursion is skiing to Govy (about 2 miles) every 2-3 days to pick up our mail and catch up on the latest happenings from the locals at Charlie’s or the Ratskeller. We venture out to the grocery store every couple of weeks (about 45 miles away).

Trail Marker on the Barlow trail.
Skiing Barlow Trail (the last major hurdle for the pioneers of the Oregon Trail) on our way to get mail in Govy.

The cabin is quiet in winter. It feels like hibernation being snowed in, and I don’t feel guilty spending the afternoon curled up by the fire with a good book. It’s easy to lose a couple of hours in the kitchen. Sometimes we just sit at the window and watch the ravens.

A perfect way to spend the afternoon.Reading a book called How to Read a Book.

Why I Started This Blog

I’m glad you found The Seasoned Cabin. I wanted a place to share what it’s actually like to move to the woods and live full time in a cabin. The good parts and the hard parts. The systems that work and the ones we’re still figuring out.

If you’re thinking about cabin life, or if you’re just curious what this actually looks like in your 50s, I hope you’ll stick around.

Please sign up below to receive updates and new posts from The Seasoned Cabin. Also, I’d love to hear your cabin stories!

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12 Comments

  1. What a wonderful blog and looking forward to following your adventures! The cabin is so beautiful.

  2. Another creative vision from my talented friend brought to life! Keep up the journaling I loved reading it! I am looking forward to the day Bob sees the bear on the webcam! Miss you! TT

  3. Heather! This is such a wonderful peek into your life on the mountain. We are so excited to support your vision and enjoy the beauty of Oregon with you! Sending love,
    -the Crawfords

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