
So, we’re at it again with the attempts to find and purchase a little piece of recreation land (with a group of people) – and we have another potential property that looks very promising! Just four hours from Vancouver, it is a 35 acre parcel in a popular summer area, with a trailer, sleeping cabin and outhouse on it already – and a great zoning for the kind of mini-development we want to do. Plus! Services! Well water, electricity and community wireless (not to mention sewer and telephone) are all available on this property. And! It has a beautiful, fish-bearing creek running through it, evidence of elk, moose and deer populations, and views of hills all around. Oh – plus it’s on the Kettle Valley Rail Trail (like right across the road from it).
B. and I went and checked out some properties in the area (Princeton) on Saturday, and we’re pretty convinced that this one has all the attributes that people involved in this venture have said they want – with one caveat. Level building sites. (And by building site I mean one-room cabin, or tent/yurt pad)….. which are restricted by the fact of the beautiful wetland that runs in the center of the property. There are probably four good building sites on level ground which meet the riparian regs. On the other hand, there is a graded slope (a replanted cutblock) which could be leveled into “steps” for preparing sites, or could be worked with in terms of building into the slope and using supports to balance the front.
(I already have mapped out exactly where I want to build the pad for our tent (eventually yurt) on the slope – which would promise incredible views of the whole valley and the beautiful creek below. My imagination, it’s a churning.)
I also think there might be some other potential sites up-top of the old logging road that runs into the property, but since we didn’t realize that was included in the land when we looked at it, we didn’t explore up there at all.
It’s definitely a quirkly piece of land, but at the rate we want to spend, it’s what we might expect – and it has the advantages of being beautiful, hot in the summer, snowy in the winter, and close to lots of recreational activity. Plus it’s in the ALR so taxes are dirt cheap, and there are no neighbours on either side (one across the road, that’s it).
Essentially, I’m crazy about this strange little wetland with its possibilities. Now we just have to find enough people with $15,000 who want to join the Everton Wilderness Society and own a little piece of something like this too. We’re hoping to get several parties who can put in an initial investment of the whole amount, but are also willing to consider taking a loan for the remainder for folks who prefer/require a “rent-to-own” option over several years.
At the moment I’m having a hard time believing we can get enough people together on this – and simultaneously challenged by an imagination that won’t let go. It’s not every property that does this to me. And while I can see that this land is not straightforward to work with, it’s completely reasonable for what we want to do, and in our price range (owing to the fact of not being an easily-developed lot).
If you know me and are reading this – interested in a getaway for sunning, swimming, wildlife viewing, hunting, fishing, boating, mountain-biking, hiking, and general communal building of a retreat – please send me a private message and I’ll fill you in on further details.
This is just one more reason that I love my ‘hood. New community share library at the corner of Penticton and William! Built by our neighbours with a community grant….


This really has just become a project blog lately – my brain is full, and there is lots going on. We looked at some very promising land this weekend – for example – and are looking for purchase partners in earnest. I get my biopsy results on Wednesday. I have a presentation due tomorrow night for class. It’s a lot, and on top of that I’ve been fighting some mysterious not-quite-cold. So for now…. PICTURES OF MY FINISHED SWEATER!
Sorry for shouting, but I am so incredibly pleased with myself and this sweater which fits perfectly. I plan to wear it for the first time tomorrow. So exciting! (And soft too, I made it out of a silk/wool blend yarn.)
Project notes can be found on my Ravelry page for this project here. Please feel free to friend me as well! I need more friends on Ravelry.
I achieved my weekend goal of getting the sleeves, button and buttonhole bands done on the sweater this weekend, so now it is ready for blocking! I’m hoping that it dries fairly quickly so that I can start the colourwork on Thursday. This sweater is turning out to be a real dream of a pattern with an attractive fit. I’m looking forward to wearing it through the rest of the rainy winter here on the coast!
I’m still working diligently on the Saturn Sweater I started two weeks ago, and am pretty pleased to say that I’ve got the body and three-quarters of each sleeve done. I’m hopeful that even with my weekend visitor I will be able to finish the sleeves and get the button-bands completed so I can block the sweater by early next week and complete the colour-work next weekend. I’m pretty pleased with this project so far as it has been easy to follow the (corrected) instructions, and as it is made in one piece, I don’t have a lot of stitching up to do in order to finish. Also, I’m really digging the fact that I will have such a fine-fit on a cardigan since I’ve been altering it as I go.
As I am getting towards a conscious end-point, I’ve been thinking about what next – and one thing I really want in my wardrobe is a shawlette for wrapping around the neck or shoulders. Of course, I’ve still got Christmas presents to work on, but it’s nice to also have something on the go for me!
So I swung by Baaad Anna’s yesterday with an idea to pick up some yarn to make a Juliana Wrap (many pictures of the Juliana Wrap online via Google Image search), and ended up a little above my budget with two skeins of Sweet George Tough Love Sock in Rogue and Grape Jelly colourways:
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But you can see why, right? Because they are so totally awesome and the skeins I picked out (those pictures are from the website) are a lot more complementary in real-life/dye-lot. Plus, I never make things in purple and the other day a co-worker wore a purple scarf that she knit and it inspired me around that particular colour. So! When I get that sweater blocked I’m going to knock off another washcloth or three in Dishie, and then it’s to the Juliana Wrap I will turn. I’m quite excited about these colours and if I can figure out the pattern I’m sure it will turn out just as nice as the other hundred or so that I’ve seen online.