Wednesday, 9 November 2022
Collaring the jewellery storage - part 3!
Friday, 16 September 2022
Done and (not) dusted!
Saturday, 10 September 2022
Singing our praises!
Friday, 2 September 2022
Key achievements!
Saturday, 27 August 2022
Skipping along ...
Friday, 19 August 2022
Sound progress?!
Saturday, 13 August 2022
Packing party?!
Friday, 12 August 2022
Addressing the years (Queensland) ...
What happened to our previous homes? It's quite interesting! Nick's fibro shack and the first home we shared together were both demolished, making way for more valuable properties. Nick's tiny abode was replaced with a huge house, which most recently sold for over $2.5 million!
Of course this one will also be demolished. It, the one next door and surrounding land sold off-market for $8.5 million, to become a commercial facility.
Our wedding house with the visiting kookaburras was renovated - as was the "brick box" that we moved into the following year. I'm not sure about the house with all the building issues. The smaller one after that had work done.
It seems the Victorian farm house has since sold, as part of a larger holding (240 acres), for 5.6 million. Wow!
Even though this house has issues, we have mostly enjoyed living here - particularly the visiting birds, frogs and geckoes. Having only one neighbour and so much space around us has been wonderful, especially after our 18 months of vanlife!
By the time we leave, we'll have lived in this one house for over 5 and a half years (67 months). That's the longest we've stayed anywhere - yep, a record!
We had 8 months together in our first home (though I lived there for 3.5 years overall). 20 months in the kookaburra/wedding house, then 27 in the "brick box". Just 14 in the house with building issues. Another 27 in our last NSW home. 3 months in our temporary accommodation at Kew, then 27 months of farm life. 18 months of van life - before 67 months as Queenslanders.
In 2015 we were facing our 7th move in 10 years. (Just about all of those moves involved other acute stress, aside from the move itself). I added all the notice periods and the total was 400-plus days. That didn't include the couple of houses that were on the market before the notice periods kicked in - and I didn't bother trying to work out how long we spent unpacking/settling in the next house(s). At the time I calculated it could easily be 18 months to 2 years of those 10 years that we'd spent preparing to move, moving and recovering afterwards.
Addressing the years (Van life) ...
There are some very pretty, restored vintage caravans. Ours was not one of those. It was a 16-foot Millard, built in 1974 (as verified by it's electrical certificate). We bought it cheaply in 2014, with plans of using it for weekends away or holidays.
By the time it came to us, it's dining booth and main bedroom had been removed. The front bunks, kitchen bench and small wardrobe remained - as well as some upper cupboards. It was more rough than ready. And it leaked.
We had one or two nights in the van after exiting the original Hamby Home(in)stead and then we house-sat a beautiful home for a month, before starting caravan life fully.
Our first caravan park was in Bacchus Marsh (60km south-west of our former home). We stayed six weeks before moving another 24km west, closer to Ballarat (just 40km away).
Nick commuted into Melbourne for his shifts and I spent four hours on weekdays (from September to December 2015), driving Vaughan back to his small school to ensure some stability for him. He attended Ballan's primary school during 2016, just 5 minutes away from the caravan park - which was so much easier.
We were seeking a QLD relocation, though had expected it would happen much quicker due to restructuring at Nick's work. We really thought we'd spend a couple of months in the van at most. Instead it was our base for around 18 months. The entire interior measured approx 2.75m by 4.5m (including our beds). The four of us shared the space with Bandit.
It still amazes me that we managed for such a long time, under fairly tricky conditions. Not only were we living at exceptionally close quarters (with Nick doing his usual shift-work) but we'd swapped rural life on a 5-acre property for a small site in a caravan park with communual amenities.
Of course when living in such limited space there was even greater incentive to get out and about. We often dined al fresco at a nearby reservoir or in the local forest for open-fire BBQing or camp oven dinners. (The van/tent didn't have an oven and the park was too basic for a camp kitchen).
As a funny aside Erin commented late in 2015 that caravan park life wasn't as bad as she expected. Seemingly she had visions of us morphing into foul-mouthed bogans!
At first we used our larger touring tent for storage and a gazebo as a cooking and dining area. By May the chef (!) complained often of being cold, so we bought a bigger, cabin tent to provide an indoor “kitchen”, dining area and walk-in-wardrobe / storage room. It was flash - with pseudo-Persian carpet (bought on sale at Spotlight)!
Although the tent was larger, it was still warmer in the van on cold nights so we tended to retreat to our beds for reading, games and craft-work - or using the computer. (We didn't have TV).
We were lucky to have an extended house-sit from July to early September 2016, staying in a lovely mud-brick house. It snowed before we moved into that house and during the first few days there.
A proper kitchen with plumbed sink, indoor bathroom and wood-fire. Bliss! So much better than tent cooking and walking to the amenities block!
When we moved back to the caravan park, Nick was officially confirmed for Brisbane relocation.
There was excitement and special celebrations - cos the alternative was redundancy.
We'd been in transit just over a year, so were keen to leave as soon as possible but had five more months of caravan life before we headed to Queensland.