Tag Archives: Alaska cabin

A Quick Visit to Halibut Cove and More Cabin Plans

Things are moving along with our cabin plans (if you missed it, you can read the where, when, and why of our future cabin here).  We are working with an architect–the same person who did our kitchen remodel–and this weekend he and I made a quick trip down to Halibut Cove to look at the property and start talking brass tacks.

We flew from Anchorage to Homer in the morning, and were treated to a beautiful neon sunrise from the air.

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I skippered the ferry that runs between Homer and Halibut Cove for many years so I know the summer moods of Kachemak Bay well, but the winter is a different story.  I was relieved that it was a calm morning, and our crossing was quick and easy.

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It was really fun to see birds that inhabit the bay in the winter but not the summer, including one I’d never seen before, a Long Tailed Duck (formerly known as an Oldsquaw).  There had been a big storm a few days earlier, and when we got to the beach there were about a million jellyfish washed up in the tide line.  We also found this big prehistoric looking skate:

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But the best part by far was walking around the property and starting to talk details.  We paced things out, looked at trees we hope to keep and those that will have to come down, and talked about framing the view in different directions.

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The bark of this poor tree has been stripped by a bear.

Rosehips and a view.

Rosehips and a view

Our architect is the master of small comfortable spaces where every detail is thought out (like our breakfast nook) and we’re so excited that he has agreed to design our cabin.  He’s a true artist: at one point while walking around the property he declared that he “needed to be silent for an hour, maybe two.”

I am still feverishly collecting images in an attempt to illustrate what I hope our cabin will be like.  Here’s what I’m picturing, and you can see other images I’ve collected in this previous post.

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Being in Halibut Cove this weekend made me feel like our cabin is really going to happen!  I’m so thrilled, and I’ll be sure to share more details with you here as our dreams turn into more concrete plans.  Thanks for reading, and check back in with us on Friday!

Off-The-Grid Cabin Tour: A Visit With My Friend Steve

I sometimes think that kids and dogs can sense an essential truth about people before adults have time to shake hands. My dogs, and especially my daughter, are crazy for my friend Steve Chopp, and I’m convinced it’s because they can see the kind and gentle nature that I think of as his defining characteristic.

Steve lives in Halibut Cove, Alaska, where my parents have a summer cabin. In the years that I spent summers there running the small local ferry, Steve and I were co-presidents of HCRC – the Halibut Cove Running Club. We were also HCRC’s only members, and even though we only ran together a few times per summer, we tied for many awards.  Ever the civil servant, Steve has also appointed himself Director of Homeland Security for Halibut Cove, and alerts residents when the threat level goes from Classic Navy to Burnt Umber.

Fireweed blooming along the path to Steve's.

Fireweed blooming along the path to Steve’s.

When I asked Steve if I could do a cabin tour for the blog he shrugged, “sure.”  I told him don’t worry about cleaning up or anything, which in blogger speak means remove 90% of your personal belongings from sight and clean until your fingers are bloody nubbins and then put out a bowl of cherries with a few scattered on the counter (don’t let your finger stumps bleed on them!).  Steve promised he wouldn’t fret about it, and when my sister and I hiked up to his cabin the next day I was glad for reconfirmation that he is a man true to his word. Red House West | Cabin Tour Steve built his home mostly out of salvaged and scrap materials.  The house is one room – only about 500 square feet – but everywhere you look there are small, deliberate details.  The best part is that every tiny, beautiful detail you discover comes with a story, and Steve is a great storyteller.

Cabin tour | Red House West

A tree grows through the porch, in the company of tentacle-like metal rods.

The house is completely off-the-grid.  Perched on a high cliff, it gets pretty battered by wind especially in winter but the materials Steve chose make for virtually maintenance-free living.

Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

The cabin as seen from Kachemak Bay.  Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

Cabin Tour || Red House West

Cabin Tour || Red House West

The entryway

The entryway

Steve made these cabinets out of salvaged wood.  I've never seen anything like them, and my photo does not do them justice.

Steve made these cabinets out of salvaged wood. I’ve never seen anything like them elsewhere:  my photo does not do them justice.

Looking through an open cabinet door to the rest of the cabin.  That's my sister in the corner, exploring a collection.

Looking through an open cabinet door to the rest of the cabin. That’s my sister in the corner, exploring a collection.

Steve is pure artist.  He’s never read Red House West (though he promises he will now) and decorating and styling aren’t his bag.  His materials are things that he has found and collected, mostly on the rocky tidal swept beaches near his home.  He’ll collect, for example, sea-bleached vertebrae of various animals for years, keeping them in a cardboard box in his living room, while loose ideas for sculptures or light fixtures solidify in his mind. Red House West || Cabin Tour

Steve salvaged these lights from an old cannery.

Steve salvaged these lights from an old cannery.

Ceiling detail.  Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

Ceiling detail. Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

Steve was a commercial fisherman in Bristol Bay for years, and during down time he would go ashore to sandy beaches where he would take his shoes off and feel for Japanese glass fishing floats buried under the sand.  He’s given away a lot of his collection, but he’s also turned some into sculptures for his own home. Cabin Tour || Red House West

Steve fished in Bristol Bay for years, and during down time he would go ashore, take of his shoes, and feel for Japanese floats under the sand.  He made this sculpture from his collection.

Red House West || Cabin Tour This art above the cabinet (which Steve also made) is clam shells that he sanded down into squares and rectangles and then glued directly to the wall. The effect in person is subtle but stunning. Red House West || Cabin Tour

Detail from the clam shell sculpture in the setting sun.  Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

Detail from the clam shell sculpture in the setting sun. Photo courtesy of Steve Chopp.

And then of course there’s the view, which my photos really didn’t capture. Cabin Tour || Red House West

Red House West|| Cabin Tour Huge thanks to Steve for letting me share his amazing home here on Red House West, and thanks to you for reading along!  Check back in on Friday for our monthly DIY roundup!