The Building of a Log Cabin Produced by Rick L. Northup
First You Have to Make a Way to Get off the Highway
Our Log Chicken Coop We Learned How to Lay Logs Here No Tape Measure, Level or Plumb Bob Allowed Oh, And No Electricity We Used A Chain Saw and a Cubit
Breaking Ground Ron’s Massey Ferguson 65 Diesel View From NorthWest Power Pole Guy Wire in Fore Ground August, 1981
Digging the Basement We’re in Clay Here So it’s Hard Digging We Only Went 4 Feet Deep at the most And Back-filled to Grade with the Dirt My Brother, Ron on His Tractor
Laying up Block I Had Never Laid Block Previously So My Brother, Chuck Took Charge of that His Ford Pick-up in the Background. I Only Went 10 Courses High.
Building the Deck Floor Joists Were 2” X 6” with Beams in the Basement every 8 Feet Flooring was mostly Red Pine 1” Boards. Larry Helping his Dad I also had some Other Help Nailing it Off.
First Floor Framed Once I got the Deck On I Framed 4” Walls They Were Set in From the Edges 2” That Left a 2” Ledge to Support the Logs They Correctly Should be Called Log Siding.
Getting Started Logging
I Got Across the East Side and Around the South Corner Before the Snow Flew
The Snow Came Early That Year
So I Shifted Course and Went to Work on the Second Deck I got the Second Deck on Just in Time, Before the Heavy Snow Hit. I Shoveled it Off Many Times. I Wrapped the Un-Logged Sides with Tarpaper for the Winter. Never Had a Problem with the Wind.
Building the Gable Ends I Pre-Framed the Gables on the Deck. Then Stood Them In Place on Each End. The Pitch Was 10/12 to Allow For a Decent Second Floor Area. My 1975 Ford Super Cab Was Handy for the Heavy Hauling.
Adding the Jack Walls I Built Four Foot Jack Walls to Support the Rafters Midway Up. This Allowed Me to Use 2” X 4” Rafters. Major Mistake Number One. (I Made Many.) You Need a Minimum of 2” X 6” for Insulation. It Looked Strange From the Highway. Like a Face.
Rafters Up and Sheeting Started
Completely Wrapped By Spring
So I Resumed Logging North and West Sides Around Porch
I Also Finished Around the South End Mini-Deck
I Started Roofing Over The Porch
Roofing a 10” X 12” Pitch Roof I Built a sort of Scaffolding up the Roof as I Worked to Make it Easier to Move Around. Note the Mini Deck on the South End I built for an Emergency Fire Exit From the Second Floor.
Amazingly, The Second Floor Never Got Rained on.
Wheel Chair Ramp and Salmon Colored Trim
North End Back Entry Porch With Vertical Siding Over It.
Exterior Complete and We Moved in Less than a Year From Ground-Breaking
View of the Finished Cabin From the West
Finished Cabin From South West
Sometime Later We Added on a Greenhouse and Another 18 Feet
North End as it Appears Today