Cabins A guide to building your own nature retreat

David R. Stiles

Book - 2001

Illustrated guide to designing and building a wilderness cabin, cottage or camp.

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Subjects
Published
Willowdale, ON ; Buffalo, N.Y. : Firefly Books 2001.
Language
English
Main Author
David R. Stiles (-)
Other Authors
Jeanie Stiles, 1944- (-)
Physical Description
240 p., [16] p. of plates : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781552095645
9781552093733
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. Cabin Planning
  • Chapter 2. Types of Cabin Construction
  • Pole Built Cabins
  • Stick Built Cabins
  • Post and Beam Cabins
  • Stone Cabins
  • Cordwood Cabins
  • Wood Siding
  • Chapter 3. Cabin Construction
  • Hand Cart
  • Site Preparation
  • Foundations
  • Windows and Doors
  • Ladders and Stairs
  • Insulation and Roofing
  • Electricity
  • Water
  • Plumbing and Sanitary Systems
  • Heating
  • Chapter 4. Log Cabins
  • Log Joints
  • Cutting Your Own Logs
  • Working with Logs
  • Two-Bedroom Log Cabin
  • Chapter 5. Cabin Designs
  • Helen's Writing Cabin
  • Pyramid Cabin
  • A-Frame Cabin
  • Pole Built Cabin
  • Timber-Framed Guest Cabin
  • Lakeside Cabin
  • Japanese Moongazing Cabin
  • Mediterranean Cabin
  • Chapter 6. Outfitting a Cabin
  • Classic Cabin Accessories
  • Protecting Your Cabin
  • Bibliography
  • Sources
  • Index
  • Notes
Review by Library Journal Review

Cabins have come a long way from the 19th-century rustic structures familiar to all school children. The Stileses, a husband-and-wife team who have collaborated on a number of woodworking titles, show how to build a cabin that reflects the builder's lifestyle; some are simple, while others contain multiple rooms and utilities. Although the authors make it look easy, the amount of work that goes into a log cabin is staggering (even small cabins require 60 or more logs that each take five to seven hours to hew by hand). Other designs include a Japanese moon-gazing cabin, a pyramid-shaped cabin, and an A-frame cabin. A section on cabin accessories (including brief construction hints for rustic wood furniture) and a list of sources (including web addresses) completes this title. It should be part of in-depth public library collections. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Foreword by Don Metz, architect In North American culture, the cabin holds a unique place in our collective consciousness. Enshrined in the best traditions of grassrooted nostalgia, the cabin symbolizes those bedrock frontier virtues of self-reliance, sturdiness, simplicity, humility and ---by inference -- honesty. By its very lack of pretension, the cabin connotes a purity of life whose loss we yearn to recall. As a genre, it stands at the moral center of a particularly American ethos defined by a cast of characters as diverse as Abe Lincoln, Davy Crockett and Henry David Thoreau. During the colonial era, the cabin was home on much of the frontier, and is still remembered in folklore, song and verse as a safe and cozy haven. Today, the notion of the cabin as Home Sweet Home persists in literature and film. Whether in the mountains, on the prairie or by the lake, it remains a symbol of all that we value. Today, the cabin has become the place we get away to when the place we're in has worn us out, a retreat from anxiety, a place dedicated to renewal. From the moment we lift the latch, push open the door and inhale that smoky-creosote-camphor cabin scent, we are altered for the better. More than a home away from home, the cabin reminds us of how -- we like to think -- life used to be lived in simpler times. It provides us with an opportunity to be closer to nature, and closer still to one another. The cabin is where we go to replace the hum of technology with the buzzing of insects, where cyberspace is out of place, where a mouse still has two ears and four legs. The cabin is a simple, sacred place where food and drink always taste better, where music sounds brighter, where evenings with loved ones linger longer into pleasure, where sleep is deep and dawn is fresh with wonders we've elsewhere forgotten. Cabins seeks to address not only the practical issues involved in the design and building of a cabin, but also to encourage the impulse. Life is long, but need it be so hectic? Imagine: After a long drive into nightfall, you step out of your car onto familiar footing -- not asphalt, not concrete -- but the stuff of millennial forests and plains and shorelines, the earth itself. You stretch your tired body, and you know immediately that every traveled mile was worth it as long as the trip ended here. Within moments of your arrival, it seems as if a blanket of peacefulness has gently covered you. An owl calls from a distant treetop, the same hoot-hoot, hoot-hoooot you remember from the last time -- welcome back . You breathe the night in deeply and look up at the stars. How could you forget they could be so dazzlingly bright? And the pines, the fragrance -- the scent of sage or the salty air. You drag your duffel bag up onto the porch and reach for the key hidden in the abandoned wren's nest above the door. The lock has its eccentricities, but even in the dark, you know how to coax it open; after all you installed it yourself. When the groceries have been put away and the lamps are lit low, you light a fire. And as you sit back in that comfy, old chair and look into the lazily flickering flames, you can't begin to imagine what life would be like without the elemental pleasures of a cabin. Excerpted from Cabins: A Guide to Building Your Own Nature Retreat by David Stiles, Jeanie Stiles All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.