A cabin in the woods

cabin in the woods
The cabin.

Two blog posts I read this week had me reminiscing about our cabin in the woods. I’m referring to Wynne Leon and Brian Hannon who have their own blogs as well as writing for The Heart of the Matter. Here’s Brian’s post about a cabin on Writing From the Heart with Brian. Wynne’s blog is called Surprised By Joy and that is a link to her post about a recent vacation in a cabin.

Property in WA
Our property on the Stilaguamish River. That’s Mount Pilchuck in the background.
The road to Robe
The road to our cabin through the woods.

On my mom’s birthday two years ago, my aunt and I drove up to Robe to spread her ashes in a place my mom loved. I wrote about that HERE.

What special memory do you have from childhood of a family place you’d visit or spend vacation?

40 thoughts on “A cabin in the woods

  1. I wonder how many of us have a special spot like this from childhood EA? I think perhaps for many in our generation we can say we do, but I think things may have changed over time…New generations don’t have these places perhaps. The pictures your Grandma painted are lovely and a wonderful way to hold onto memories. My family had a cabin on the lake (Lake Tapps in Bonney Lake) that I have a few random pictures of still. Painted “forest green” and affording us an amazing full view of Mt Rainier from our own large front windows and deck. Dad built it himself. We basically lived there all summer, and for years we had the infamous outhouse as well…until I finally convinced dad to put in a “real bathroom” and as a bonus I got my own bedroom 🙂

    • I remember reading about your cabin and it also brought back memories of mine. I think our parents were able to build cabins on their own and buy affordable property. No longer is that the case. We are lucky to have those memories.

  2. Thanks, Elizabeth – beautiful in every way. Especially this: “There was a certain smell of evergreens at Robe along with a musty tinge inside the cabin.” I could almost catch a whiff…💕

    • Exactly. My brother and I were going to rebuild but we have two entirely different visions and budgets. We decided to keep it natural. Also, my brother lives an hour away and I’m nowhere near. His kids started going up to kayak and fish with their kids. But they said it’s crowded with extended family who we don’t know and it’s no longer private.

      • So true. Even going back to our town of Palm Springs where we lived for 30 years isn’t fun. I am learning to have no desire to try to go home again.

  3. What an incredible place for all sorts of adventures, Elizabeth! I remember your post when you spread the ashes – love the pictures and paintings you included here. That one of you playing by the river is wonderful! Beautiful post. And thanks for the shoutout!

    • The cabin has wonderful memories for me. My brother lives an hour away now but has no desire to visit. How nice to visit your aunt in West Hampton. It sound beautiful.

  4. Oh my Elizabeth, what a cool post. Love the pictures of the river and the fireplace. It looks so idyllic. Love that your dad designed it and the two of them built it together. No electricity or running water . . . yes, it would be “roughing it” but something about being in nature. Beautiful post and thanks for the shout out!!!!!!

    • Thank you, Brian. I was inspired by your post, Wynne’s and Deb mentioned their cabins in Washington recently, too. I miss the cabin, but at least the property stays in nature and our family. It’s miles out of civilization but an hour from Seattle.

  5. What a beautiful spot! My dad’s family and relatives would gather at Trout Lake in southern Washington while he was growing up. My mom’s family would vacation at a cabin on Priest Lake in northern Idaho. But my family moved around with the Army and we did not have a “spot.” But we did camp several times at Camp David in Virginia, and once had a cabin on a lake in Maine. Then there was the stay on an uninhabited island in the Belize Cayes. Worst sunburn of my life!

    • What a variety of places. Camp David? How many people can say that? I have heard of Priest Lake but not Trout Lake. My worst sunburn was in second grade on our first big trip. It was to Hawaii. I don’t think we had any sunscreen with us. Compared to Washington’s sun, it was brutal.

  6. We had a summer place in Yaphank, NY that originally had no running water and an outhouse, until my parents remodeled the place. It was right on the banks of the Carmens River. It was an idyllic spot that I hated. Nature’s beauty did not make up for time lost with my friends in the city. You can take the boy out of the city, but you can’t take the city out of the boy.

  7. My parents were divorced when I was young and we moved a lot. My special memories of a place would include two entirely different spots- the one home my mom and stepdad ever owned (and only for a few years) in West St. Paul, MN, a house I loved in a place I loved with all my teenaged heart, and Rocky Mountain National Park where my dad took my brother and me tent camping every summer during my junior and senior high school years.

    • Thanks for sharing your memories. The camping trips sound wonderful. We went tent camping a few years when I was young and those memories stayed with me. We did tent camping with our kids at the beach near Santa Barbara every Easter.

  8. I don’t have a particular memory of any one family vacation place. We stayed in hotels and usually went to large cities. No camping, no rugged outdoors, but I did learn how to order room service at a young age.

  9. I love that your family has this in their memory bank; what a gift and what a great idea your Grandfather had way back when.
    So sad that it is no longer standing, but it’s great that someone in the family owns the land.
    Love the artwork from your talented Grandma.
    My most cherished memories of childhood were at my Grandparents house in Miami; I loved my time being doted on, meals prepared daily and swimming my their pool to my hearts content.

    • Thanks! Your memories of your grandparents house sound wonderful. Very few people had an experience like that. I’m glad we still have the property, but it’s far away from us, so I don’t get to be there often.

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