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344

My beloved "Cabin in the Woods" (pic8.co)

Located in the Western Maine Mountains. Cedar pole roof frame with 2x4 walls, shiplap and battens.

Built by Dad and me in the fall of 1977. 4 seasons of fun here!

Sleeps up to 8.

Overlooks a small brook trout filled pond (on the right) at the base of a tall mountain. The stream exiting the pond travels behind the camp along the back property line. We used the stationary part of a duo-pane sliding glass door mounted sideways as a picture window facing the pond and mountain.

No electricity. Refrigeration by an old 1940s Servel gas powered refrigerator. Gas lights, gas cook stove. Woodstove for heat. Uninsulated. One seater Outhouse to the left just out of picture view.

Oh, the stories I could tell...

[My beloved "Cabin in the Woods"](https://pic8.co/sh/5kYNU9.png) Located in the Western Maine Mountains. Cedar pole roof frame with 2x4 walls, shiplap and battens. Built by Dad and me in the fall of 1977. 4 seasons of fun here! Sleeps up to 8. Overlooks a small brook trout filled pond (on the right) at the base of a tall mountain. The stream exiting the pond travels behind the camp along the back property line. We used the stationary part of a duo-pane sliding glass door mounted sideways as a picture window facing the pond and mountain. No electricity. Refrigeration by an old 1940s Servel gas powered refrigerator. Gas lights, gas cook stove. Woodstove for heat. Uninsulated. One seater Outhouse to the left just out of picture view. Oh, the stories I could tell...

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

Looks amazing.

[–] 1 pt (edited )

Great escape from the rat race. Very addicting if you let it become a habit.

Fishing, hunting, atvs, snowmobiling, putt around the logging roads and woods with my Tacoma. Nearest town had a claimed population of 32 in 2000.

[–] 1 pt

The only "down side" is the outhouse (have not had to use one of those in forever). Otherwise I would put in a little shed with some batteries and some off-grid power and a starlink (so I could work remote) and would just live there. Well, as long as I could have a bunch of space to grow food too =)

[–] 1 pt

In the winter you can bring the toilet seat inside to keep it warm until needed...We never did, even the girls put up with it (but I was told they just hovered over it without sitting on it). I've seen wintertime lows hit -37F there on a couple snowmobile trips over the last 30 years. A unique feeling to drop your drawers and sit on a -37F toilet seat. So cold it literally burns. Makes you not want to linger any longer than necessary.