Tom and I have owned three houses since we’ve been married and I can honestly say that most weekends in those (almost) 30 years have been spent “working on the house.” Our first house in Oceanside, California was brand new, so most of Tom’s work in that house was spent outside, building a yard. It was his first big project and everything he did, he did alone (I was inside wrangling four kidlets!), just figuring things out as he went along. Here’s the yard a few weeks after we moved in (look at preschooler Elisabeth and toddler Peter!):
(That’s Tasha, our only non-Golden Retriever dog. We eventually ended up giving her away because she couldn’t be completely trusted with the kids… probably because we were too busy with said kids to train her properly.)
And here’s the yard just before we sold the house in 1993, five years later (and yes, it took the full five years to create this):
(Kat!)
(Aleks!)
I loved that yard and that house and that neighborhood and our neighbors and all of it. I think I’ll always be able to say that some of my happiest years were spent in that house.
From there, we moved to another brand new house in another brand new neighborhood, this time in Richland, Washington.
Tom did plenty of work inside, but it was mostly of the “make-it-feel-like-ours” variety. I don’t even have any “before” photos of our back yard, but imagine a whole lot of dirt, dust, and sagebrush – because that’s what Eastern Washington consists of!
When we sold the house in 1995 a mere 18 months after buying it (Tom hated his job at Hanford and hated the area, calling it the “arm pit of Washington State), this is what the back yard looked like (and that’s Aleks, Kat, and their cousins Tina and Barry):
…and this is Peter supervising the moving process:
In summer of 1995, we bought this house in Woodinville, Washington:
It was the first “old” house we’d owned(if you could call a 1978 split-level “old”) and it needed massive amounts of work, both inside and outside. We would have loved another new house, but the market sucked in both Richland and Seattle and this (gag) split level was all we could afford. Neither of us liked it all that much (except for the to-die-for yard and forested acre), and Tom insisted all along that “you can’t make a silk purse from a sow’s ear.” But we took a deep breath in 1995, started in on the process and did all this (13 years of house renovations in one blog post)! As I exclaimed at the end of that post, the only things left to do at that point was to replace the god-awful front door and paint the house.
Both have now been done and this is what our house looks like today:
And today I can say that, except for the typical “home maintenance” stuff, we are DONE!
Done, I tell you!
Ha! Ironically, Tom just kibitzed this post and he insists, “Oh, no we’re not done!”
I have forgotten, it seems, that his plan for this summer is to create in this backyard space beneath the new deck…
…a babbling stream that meanders around big stepping-stone boulders which lead to the flagstone patio with new fire pit. (He’ll remove the fire pit and patio that he and Kat built years ago and replace that area with the new stream with boulders, and he’ll put flagstone on the slab where the hot tub used to be and build a new fire pit there.)
So I guess I was wrong. On our 30th wedding anniversary in two days, Tom will still be building and remodeling! I have a feeling Tom will always be building and remodeling – and as much as it seems I might complain, I am actually extremely grateful to be married to such a handy, talented, creative, hard-working man who has made many a house a true home for his family.
Amazing before and after photos and I know what you've had done in the inside of that house too. One of the last things Patt did before he got sick was to customize and repaint the outside of our house. It looks so much different than it did. (but it was a ton of work)
ReplyDeleteto back Tom: my parents always told me "the day you think your house is finished, you are old". I think they are right: once you stop making plans, stop making changes or updates...you (and your house) quickly gets old. So Tom...keep going ;)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeleteHA! Deleted because of a comment about needing a RAILING on your front steps. Unbelievable...
ReplyDeleteAnon,
ReplyDeleteYou're just a pest and, much as I appreciate your absolute loyalty to my blog (I didn't know anyone was still reading!), you can apparently ONLY find negative things to say. You comment often, and have for years, but EVERY SINGLE comment of yours is snarky and well, just plain "bratty and bullish." Not once have you posted a comment that's even remotely kind.
Your comments lack respect and any real interest in the content of my blog, other than to bash any part of any post. I will continue to delete comments until you can at least show some objectivity and respect.
I still have no idea who you are and I am fascinated by your interest in and commitment to my blog (as far as bashing it), but to tell you the truth, I don't need the consistent negativity from you. I'll delete any and all comments from you until and unless things change.
Please feel free to e-mail me privately, should you want to communicate further.
Carol