Project: Fireplace

Anyone who has been at our house on Maple Wood knows that our fireplace was always pretty “plain Jane”.  When we had the house built we needed to cut costs, so the fireplace was never really finished the way we had planned. Now this is kind of a good and bad scenario.

The bad – we never were able to enjoy a finished fireplace 😦

The good – finishing it now has allowed us to update to a more contemporary look. 🙂

Thanks again to Andre and Jim for a job well done. I could not have wished for a more beautiful finished project and we are now very close to the end of our renos. We just need to do some: painting and baseboard work in the master bedroom, outside yard clean up, finishing up with some odds and ends and a major clean up (including a purge). We are almost there!

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More Renos!

Posted by Wanda

Working hard to get the “Regina” house ready for sale!  Andre and Jim tackled the big job of refinishing the carpeted stairs with wood. Gone are the white spindles; replaced by wrought iron and maple and it looks beautiful!  The guys did an amazing job!

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House plans & Walk thru

Posted by Wanda

We are starting to work with the builder and the designer to finalize plans for the new house.  We are working toward a potential start date of July 2017.   It’s all pretty exciting and kind of scary as we have never lived any place but Regina Sask!

Below is a Youtube link to an animated walk thru of the plans which Wanda put together using Home Design Suite Software (thanks for the tip Kyla!)

Animated walk thru upper level – Orca View

Animated walk thru lower level – Orca View

I have also uploaded some preliminary plans which we are still fine tuning.

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Upper level floor plan

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Lower level floor plan

Chemainus – The Murals (Part Three)

Posted by Wanda

“The Murals”

In 1981 the town of Chemainus started a revitalization project, giving the town a much needed facelift. In 1982 five murals were commissioned to adorn walls in the downtown area of the community. In 1983, Chemainus won the renowned New York Downtown Revitalization Award for the redevelopment of its downtown core. That same year the sawmill which employed many of the residents shut down. The town leveraged the acclaim it was receiving from the award by expanding the Mural Project. Chemainus now boasts forty four murals depicting the history of the area and it has become a popular tourist destination on the island.

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I found this mural and its story (see excerpt below) to be especially poignant. Pictures of all the murals, their location and their stories can be found at:

Chemainus Festival of Murals Society

Click on the “The Art ” tab.

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The Hermit

Charlie Abbott arrived in Chemainus sometime in the 1970s (nobody knows exactly when or why), and wandered into the deep, green forest surrounding this small community where he spent the rest of his life.

Old and bent with age, Charlie lived alone in the woods. He came to appreciate and love the forest, its wild inhabitants, and the changing seasons. For the few people that knew of his existence, he was simply called “The Hermit”.

Through acres of forest wilderness, he created “The Hermit Trails”. They were a marvel of enterprise, endurance and unique splendour. Slowly and painfully, he created a garden beneath the canopy of giant maples and firs, carving paths through the woodland floor. Slabs of rock, large and small, were hauled and placed to form intricate walkways and steps. Every day, Charlie swept the paths and cleared the fallen debris from both winter snowfalls and autumn windstorms.

This place of Charlie Abbott’s rebirth, what he called “the last stop on my pilgrimage”, became a place of solace and peace for others as well. He shunned human contact and had no sense of ownership over his domain. “I can’t take it with me when I go”, he would say.

He saw himself as a simple caretaker, nourishing the ground from which he drew his strength. It was a task more suited to a younger man, but for the last decade of his life, Charlie Abbott buried his gnarled hands in the rich earth and released its beauty. He chose to dwell in the silence of the forest.

Charlie Abbott’s pilgrimage ended on April 14, 1989 when, at the age of 87, “The Hermit” of Chemainus died.