Prep Monday—Taking Stock


Now that I have a supply closet in the barn, I can take stock of what supplies I have and what I still need. It’s much easier when everything is organized, and in one place.

Back in STL, I had a shelf in the garage, plus overflow onto the pool table, plus the upper kitchen cabinets. Now, I can walk into a 8 X 8, 6-foot-tall storage unit and see everything on the shelves.

storage

So, what do we have?

Three cases of water bottles. We use these on occasion; they are the most practical to store at this time. When working outside, we use refillable bottles, and we do have a well and a pond. We also have various containers that will hold water, along with other empty containers to repackage certain foods.

Commercially canned vegetables. Not ideal, perhaps, but if one is hungry one tends to worry a whole lot less about GMOs or preservatives and additives. The key is being prepared to ward off starvation, if it came to that. We buy these on sale, a few at a time.

Home-canned fruits and preserves and dried herbs and vegetables, as well as pickles. Okay, so I went a little overboard on the pickles…that’s another subject! Once we make the move, I’ll have more time to do more canning, and we’ll purchase a new deep freeze; I much prefer frozen vegetables to canned.

Commercial spices. These, too, are purchased on sale. Even icky stuff can be made more palatable, which brings me to the icky shelf. You know those food items you accumulate somehow, the ones you’d never eat but immediately find their way into the food drive box? I have a shelf for that. Naturally, I stock and store things we’ll eat—just as I plant the garden—but you never know. Someday, that tin of sardines or whatever might sound good. I doubt it, but ya never know!

We also keep a supply of personal care items: shampoo, soaps, deodorant, toothpaste, etc. We have shelves for first aid and OTC meds, as well as keeping 90 days or more of prescription meds. And of course, household items, such as detergents, dish soaps, paper towels, toilet paper, and so forth.

Now, you don’t have to have a huge supply closet—you can easily tuck things away here and there, in regular closets, top kitchen cabinet shelves, your garage. But you should always keep track of those things: first in, first out. Make a running list and keep it up-to-date so you always know what you have.

That was my problem. I had so many places to store things, and occasionally someone besides me would re-stock the pantry or bathroom. Ahem. It was pretty rare, but it did happen. So I got to the point where I wasn’t entirely sure what I had and what I needed.

You’ll also notice in the picture that there are a few plastic tubs. These are for things that a mouse might find particularly tasty, and yes, that includes toothpaste. Doesn’t do a bit of good for you to store things that are ruined by rodents. We do everything we can to keep their population down, but sometimes they still can find their way inside.

Work Wednesday—The Remodel


We’ve been working more on the house remodel than anything else lately, especially due to the heat. Every day, of course, there are chores like composting and burning trash, weeding and checking over the garden, and tracking the progress on the old house.

Which, I’m thrilled to say, now resembles a one-story A-frame. They pushed it over Monday afternoon, and by next week, it should all have disappeared! Fencing and a second gate will go up across the front to fill in the gaps.

IMG_5767[1]

So, the remodel. Well, I’m not going to move in and THEN try to re-do everything, so we’re removing plywood (??) and replacing almost all of it with drywall. I say “almost,” because the front of the living room and soon-to-be office are also plywood, with lots of windows. What a pain. Besides, those pieces don’t look as bad as the rest of it did. I can live with it.

IMG_5726[1]

Then there’s the closet. The seller didn’t like walls, apparently, but when he built them, he went all-out. The three closet walls—it’s built into the center, load-bearing wall—are all super-reinforced. Since it’s just on one side (keep in mind that the entire house is 30X30), we finally decided it must be a safe room, for tornados and such. Down it comes. Husband has been moving electric, taking out some outlets and moving switches.

IMG_5731[1]

Next week, we’ll be adding some half-walls to divide things up a bit. Also, I need more wall space. Interesting how so much furniture is designed to be set against a wall.

After that, we’ll de-popcorn the ceiling, replace 2-3 of the fans, and start painting. Then we’ll have just the kitchen to work on: adding a double wall oven and extra cabinets and counters, removing the dishwasher, and replacing the existing counters.

Move-in date is still ten and a half months away, but—and this is a big but—we’re rapidly closing in on the start of school, which means we can only come down on weekends, for two days at a time. So that gives us a total of about three months.

However, I’m happy to report that the garage is almost empty! All the storable stuff, kids’ things and memorabilia, etc., has been moved. Next up, getting rid of this giant garage sale pile—coming in October. I think. I hate doing these, but we’ll see. Maybe I’ll just call a charity and have them pick up the whole lot!