mickeyzalewski drywall bad :mad: log home good :D
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mickeyzalewski drywall bad :mad: log home good :D
Mickey, welcome...and keep reading! I think you will find that the more you read, the more you will understand how much sense the LHBA style home makes. We look forward to having you around.
Thanks for the warm welcome!
Hey mickey --
where were you when I had a 120 14'ft's to hang?
Man that was the worst 4 months of my LIFE!!!!
drywall, tape, mud, sand, finish sand, final sand, 500W light sand.... UGHHH.
Welcome to the forums.
JD
Sheetrock is hard, but not as hard to do as I first made it. Here's a great site for reducing work and getting great results: http://drywallschool.com/
Peter
Micky, I was skeptical too. I'm less so now that I have looked at every picture in the gallery, read just about ever word in the forum, taken the class, bought our plans, and bought our land. My husband and I retired just a few months ago in our mid-late 50's. We will be building a vacation home. The way we look at it is that instead of spending money on expensive vacations or cruises, or buying an RV that will depreciate and cost a fortune in gas, we are building something of lasting value. It will be fun to build and to enjoy afterwards, and we can leave it to our future generations to enjoy forever. Or we can sell it at some point and I am already SURE we will make a nice profit because we did the research. The cost of the land and the build is easily $100,000 less than what similar neighboring properties with less special cabins have sold for in the last two years - since the real estate crash. Another possibility for us is to eventually live there full time and sell or rent out our main house. I have a finance/accounting background and trust me, I plan to account for every single cent involved in the process of building our log home, including the costs of traveling to and taking the class, every tool bought or rented, etc. Not just land and raw materials. So if you want to wait about two years I will be able to tell you definitively whether or not the program works, lol! Meantime, we will be having a great retirement, being mentally and physically active, with a shared hobby, new skills, new friends, etc. I forgot to mention that we are very outdoorsy and our property is in the heart of one of the best outdoor recreational areas in the country (in our opinion). We will have lots of fun "fun" as well as fun "work."
In conclusion - do the research and give thought to what you want your retirement to be. This is not for everyone, but it could be perfect for you like it is for us!
Shari
Hi everyone! My name is Anna, I attended the January 2012 class with my older sister and my Dad.
Our family is currently looking for property to build on in northern Arkansas. Our family building crew consists of my Dad, my Mom, my older sisters Katherine she is on the forums as jot and Rebecca. I will be graduating high school in June, I was home schooled all the way! Building our own home has always been a family dream, now we will be fulfilling it. We went to our first auction today! Didn’t get anything, but it was fun. We will be going to a lot more auctions and ever flee market for miles around, looking for all the supplies we need for building. Looking forward to being on the forums and getting to know everyone. :D
Greetings all! My name is Joe, I am 19 years old and very interested in building my own log cabin. Although i have no skills or money yet i do have determination i learned from moving around all my life being an Army Child and Wrestler. I am willing to work hard to fufill what i want in my life which is a happy one. I am very much wound up in what most people would consider the pioneers life. Raised in NC, Germany, Louisiana, MD, Arkansas, and Virginia i have always been a more of a rural kind of guy. I enjoy working in the woods and wearing over alls and my grandpa's suspenders. I am hopefully going to be attending a class relatively soon once my dad gets back from afghanistan and we move out west to arizona. At which point i will be much closer to your classes in las vegas. I look forward to learning and gaining more information and friends. thanks all, best of luck. Joeboy
welcome to our LHBA family Joe:) all my thanks to your father for his service to our country, and thanks to your family as well for its sacrifices!
Not to be flippant, but LilJoe can get USAA auto insurance now!!!
Seriously, welcome to the forums.
Funny you say that, i do indeed have USAA insurance and banking and it's great i'm glad they give back to the services. And thanks for the welcome guys. I can't wait to get closer to my dream that is one day building my own cabin and longboards. I am soon going to apply for school this coming spring at the local community colllege. Any recommendations as far as classes go i.e. (drafting, woodworking or construction) i have always been involved in shop class and have been good with my hands but i feel like i need the resources to tools more than anything. Where did you guys all start?
Welcome Anna --
I remember seeing you all chiming in after you went to class.
Its great to see the family doing this together.
I have seven children and have 2 left to home school.
They are 11 and 7.
welcome aboard.
JD
Hello Everyone Dave here in St Louis Mo. Looking for 5 plus acres of land now and want to build a cabin on it.
you've come to the right place:)
Thanks for the welcome! I said we did not get anything at the auction but we did, a cold!Quote:
Howdy..sounds like you will be starting sooner than later...great. Keep us posted on your progress
Have not found what we are looking for in property yet.
Welcome Joe! I know what it feels like to move around a lot my dad was an engineer so we went where they needed a power plant. We lived in Louisiana for a while too, hot isn’t it?Quote:
Greetings all! My name is Joe, I am 19 years old and very interested in building my own log cabin. Although i have no skills or money yet i do have determination i learned from moving around all my life being an Army Child and Wrestler. I am willing to work hard to fufill what i want in my life which is a happy one. I am very much wound up in what most people would consider the pioneers life. Raised in NC, Germany, Louisiana, MD, Arkansas, and Virginia i have always been a more of a rural kind of guy. I enjoy working in the woods and wearing over alls and my grandpa's suspenders. I am hopefully going to be attending a class relatively soon once my dad gets back from afghanistan and we move out west to arizona. At which point i will be much closer to your classes in las vegas. I look forward to learning and gaining more information and friends. thanks all, best of luck. Joeboy
Hey, JD you are blessed to still have some kids around. My Dad is lamenting that I am the last one!Quote:
Welcome Anna --
I remember seeing you all chiming in after you went to class.
Its great to see the family doing this together.
I have seven children and have 2 left to home school.
They are 11 and 7.
welcome aboard.
JD
I am Dario Andrea, a new member but I have been following the Log Home Builders Association for years dreaming about my own place until finally make it to join an upcoming class on March in Vegas.
I am a fine arts Painter in New York and after the workshop would be relocating in the mountains in Alaska!!! to build my log home and Art Studio Atelier/workshop
Welcome Dario! Ah! the mountains in Alaska, I like the way you think! Congratulations on signing up for the class. I lurked around here for a couple of years before even asking my first question. LHBA is a Real Deal. You will learn how to do it! See you on the Members side in a couple of weeks.
hi all. nice to see that the classes are still around. I took them with Skip at the Bar- E ranch around 1976 I think it was. Since then i have put together my share of log cabins, log homes, log garages, you name it i guess.But it was fun to do. The first one i ever made is sitting over at Copalis Beach, washington, in that area anyway, just a mile or so south of the town. i do wish there was some members to get together with at times here where I live now which is Colville, washington. I do have an email address if someone is around here,its garysplace2000 at hotmail dot com. dont know if its ok to post addresses on here or not but i guess i will find out sooner or later. well thats it for now, bye to everyone.Gary
Hey Gary,
Now that you see how LHBA does it now, don't be so scarce. It's all changed since the days of the monthly meeting at Skip's place. Personally I like how it works now and it has certainly opened up the rest of the world to LHBA. There's been a hint about a West Coats Gettogether sometime near Thanksgiving. We'd love to see you there.
Hello Everyone!
I have been reading a lot here for the last few months and got my log fever going steady now. Have not had a chance to post yet, so I'm doing it now before I see some of you (hopefully) at Vegas this coming weekend. It is a great community here and I cannot wait to be a part of it. Any central Florida members that built their log homes around? Anyone from Florida going to the class?
Anyway, I'm psyched to be here and seeYa on the other side.
Andy:D
Introducer:
andy, are you planning on leaving central FL? I could think of few places worse for a log home, just my opinion...
King of Swamp Castle: When I first came here, this was all swamp. Everyone said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built in all the same, just to show them. It sank into the swamp. So I built a second one. That sank into the swamp. So I built a third. That burned down, fell over, then sank into the swamp. But the fourth one stayed up. And that's what you're going to get, Lad, the strongest castle in all of England. (or Florida)
haha. I rarely get to quote MP on here! Anyway, you can build a log home anywhere, but logs, bugs, humidity, etc are concerns.
Look forward to seeing you on the other side.
-Peter
That is very encouraging!
It will only take me four tries to build a log home in Florida?!
That actually is the usual response I get around here. To answer your question, my Holy Grail would be to build in Northern Georgia/NC/SC Mountains, but as it stands now I will build somewhere around DeLand while kids are still in school and my work is here. Besides, being raised in Siberia gave me a good dose of snowy climate. I enjoy my diving and fishing.
Who knows what the future will bring, and how my views might change after the class.
Hey, if they can build kits here why not real log home then.
I tend to always travel upstream of popular belief(thats probably why it feels so cozy here for me).
BTW Love Monty Python
I guess it's time to introduce myself!
I'm a 22 year old comic author/web designer/workaholic. I've dreamed about having my own land for as long as I can remember and every penny I save goes into my house fund. My grandmother restored old homes and ran an antique shop - her kitchen was a tiny log cabin attached to the main house - so I'm stoked to build a brand new one in such a classic style. I've recently moved away from NYC to my home state of Kentucky for this venture and want to find a property that's tillable with a perennial stream for micro hydro energy.
I'll be attending the class in May with a friend, we're two tiny gals but I know we're tough enough to pull this off. Can't wait to meet everyone!
Ms. Fire,
Can't wait to say welcome aboard. You two will pull it off just fine.
Hello all,
My name is Mario and my wife (Celianne) and I will be attending the May 2012 class. We presently live near San Diego but we own 10 acres in the Sierra foothills just outside of Georgetown Ca. We plan on building there in 24-36 months and are just starting to get things together. The pad has been graded, the well is in and power is on the edge of the property although we need a drop and meter installed. Also the septic system has been engineered but still needs to be built. So you can see we are part way there. While the land is heavily wooded we are reluctant to take our own trees and will most likely find a local source - one of the main industries in the area is logging. We are looking forward to the class and hope to learn enough to build a log home.
Mario/Celianne,
Welcome to the family. We look forward to seeing you on the 'other side'. :)
You are well on your way and may find that your 24-36 months may shorten after class... You'll be so excited you won't want to wait.
congrats on climbing on board.
JD
Hey Spitfire,
I too am looking for land in KY with a perennial stream (or at least spring), but have been finding it very tough. We've been looking for almost a year now and I can't think of any land within 50 miles of my wife's family that I haven't looked at. Most streams/creeks dry up and there really isn't that many to begin with. Here in eastern PA we have streams everywhere. I have a perennial stream 10 yards from my house going through the middle of my yard. The best option I have bookmarked is 11 acres at the edge of Lexington on the Kentucky river. It's expensive though ($180k):eek: but would allow for farming, multiple build sites (for guesthouse, barn, garage...) and possibly even some hunting. I'd prefer a stream though so that I could dam up my own lake, but the KY river has got to be a great place to retire on some day. A nice vintage houseboat would be pretty sweet to have docked out back too.
Good Luck!
Josh
the thing with water is flooding. I would not build in even a 500 year flood zone. In the mountains, there is generally enough drop for MH, and you can find a place where you can build up the ravine from the water... You don't have to worry about flooding...
Just be careful.
I've seen listings for tracts with good streams but I don't need (can't afford) that much land. Even if I find one it's going to have to have good head/flow and not be tied up in regulations so I know I'm in for a long search. At least I won't be tethered to a 50 mile limit; in Louisville right now and may peek into Indiana. I hope we both find what we're looking for. :)
Thanks stressman, and I know you know a lot about water, I've seen your charts :p
I plan to vet the property a lot also considering we plan to live the rest of our lives on it. KY is very hilly (in areas) and being elevated from the river is pretty easy with some properties. The KY river has a lot of areas where there's ravines on both sides. But I look forward to getting everyone's input when we 'think' we've found a place.
Cheers
Hi All,
my name is Shirley we are interesred in finding out if any members are selling their home in ID preffered our financial officer recomended we buy not build sinc we r military and can use our VA. we woulf like 3 pulse rooms 2 + bathroom lots of land. hubby is taking may class anyway but we r ready to buy by this time next year!. our e-mail lucas
Shirley,
I'm not speaking for the member who can help you, but for the best of BOTH worlds... On the other side you will find a member who builds them for a living.
Rckclmbr -- can speak for himself.
JD
Hi, I have a suggestion for you. If you really want to maximize your benefits and get the home you want, I would use the VA loan to buy the land you really want with a house/trailer house of little value. Then live there while you build your dream home out of pocket. The true LHBA credo is about trying to build without borrowing money at all, but I can see where you might want to take advantage of benefits that are offered to you, instead of letting them "go to waste" so to speak. Buying a LHBA built home isn't a bad idea either, but they are fairly rare so finding one in a location you want built the way you want might be a challenge. As long as he is taking the class you will not get into any trouble with kit homes or junk like that, so you'll be fine which ever way you decide to go. One other note, aside from the obvious financial benefits of building your own house, it is also incredibly fun! Best of luck.
New here.
Live in TC's area of MN and ready to take the plunge to the next chapter of our book of life this year.
We both have just retired - my bride thru 38 years of working at same place and myself a bone tossed away by company downsizing. Life goes on.
Game plan is to build in UP of Michigan, to begin clearing land this fall and winter and get moving forward.
The class?? - hopefully this fall/winter if offered, otherwise the next time it is. Cannot make the May one due to family committments made long ago.
Not a lot more to add - a very very long time reader/lurker here, I have toyed with hiring this out and still may much of it (or little-we shall see), age and health may play into the decision going forward. Frankly - my gene pool says if I want to enjoy it for awhile after completion hiring out most is the answer. I admire those of you who can do it all and have the years ahead to do so and in a cost effective manner. In a perfect world so would I.
Love all the posts, pics and support you share with one another. Like a big ol' happy family that sometimes has a bicker or two, sometimes almost need that woodshed out back to resolve things and then presto _ all is again good and one happy family again. lol
Look forward to someday meeting many of you.
LHN - you would be surprised at how much I have read here. Think I have read every post back to #1 here at least once, many 6-7-8 times. You all reference the million post on the member side and those I hope to read all of - maybe time says it will be only those that are relevant to me specifically will be possible. We shall see.
Didn't I say I been lurking a loooong time. ;)
My issue or limitations really has nothing to do with physical issues. It's the other thing, time, that we don't have control of, nor does the medical profession despite the amount of money one can throw at things.
I still have the ability but really would hate to stretch the build out to far and then have the wife stuck with more than she wants to be in the middle of or can handle solo. It likely means smaller than what we dreamed and that is fine. Likely at greater expense and that I want to control as best possible. Likely also in a shorter time frame by half than what is ideal to economize - but I want time to enjoy it too so that is the cost I have deal with.
I'll git her down somehow
Be sure to live every minute... even if you leave a loose end dangling here and there.
I am reminded of the time the gal called the radio personality whining that she was recently widowed and wished she were young enough to get her degree because "My God, in four hears I'll be 58 years old!".
His response... "How old will you be in four years if you don't get your degree?".
PS... This advice is aimed at everyone, not just Pokey.