Simple Simon's: Great breakfast!
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Food, Entertainment, and Arts
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Friday, August 28, 2015
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
New Places Around Portland Maine
Two new shops on Brackett St in Portland: Baxter's Sweets and Spices and Omi's Coffee Shop.
Both look like fun!
Tuesday, August 25, 2015
Monday, August 24, 2015
101 Things I Love about Portland Maine
Mac's Grill in Auburn~~delicious appetizers like bacon-wrapped steak tips and great selection of cocktails. Reasonable, too.
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Living in a Small Home
How a Family of 4 Lives in a 320-Square-Foot Home (Pretty Happily)
The Berzins family lives in a tiny home in Virginia — just 320 square feet. All images in this post: Hari Berzins, TinyHouseFamily.com
While many of us commit to the three decades it takes to pay off a mortgage, Hari and Karl Berzins come at homeownership from a completely different viewpoint.
They live in a tiny 8-foot-by-21-foot home they built with salvaged materials in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. Counting the loft space with its three feet of headroom, that’s 320 square feet, or about the size of most people’s master bedrooms.
It might be a tiny house, but it’s paid for. “We wanted to really cut back our overhead as far as we possibly could and own what we live in outright so we have the choice to do what makes us happy,” says Hari, who works part time for a non-profit while husband Karl works as a chef.
They live in a tiny 8-foot-by-21-foot home they built with salvaged materials in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. Counting the loft space with its three feet of headroom, that’s 320 square feet, or about the size of most people’s master bedrooms.
It might be a tiny house, but it’s paid for. “We wanted to really cut back our overhead as far as we possibly could and own what we live in outright so we have the choice to do what makes us happy,” says Hari, who works part time for a non-profit while husband Karl works as a chef.
Sharing that 320 square feet are the Berzins’ two kids, ages 7 and 9, and a Great Pyrenees, a 3-foot-tall dog weighing in around 90 pounds.
The inspiration to live tiny came to the Berzins after they lost both a business and a 1,500-square-foot home in Florida during the recession. While they didn’t want to go into debt again, they do value homeownership, so Hari and Karl moved into an affordable two-bedroom rental and spent the next year saving $25,000 to buy the 3-acre lot in Virginia where their tiny house now sits.
Starting with a reclaimed trailer from an old mobile home, the couple began assembling their tiny home in Florida using salvaged building supplies purchased from Craigslist.org.
“Karl learned his building skills from his father and his eight years working in construction during the building boom in Florida,” Hari said. “It’s genetic; he comes from a long line of Latvian handy-folk.”
When the home’s exterior was done, Hari and Karl hooked up the trailer to the hitch of a U-Haul truck and headed to Virginia. There, they finished the interior of the tiny house with an apartment-sized 1950s gas range, floor-to-ceiling shelves, and a couch with cushions that lift up to reveal storage.
The inspiration to live tiny came to the Berzins after they lost both a business and a 1,500-square-foot home in Florida during the recession. While they didn’t want to go into debt again, they do value homeownership, so Hari and Karl moved into an affordable two-bedroom rental and spent the next year saving $25,000 to buy the 3-acre lot in Virginia where their tiny house now sits.
Starting with a reclaimed trailer from an old mobile home, the couple began assembling their tiny home in Florida using salvaged building supplies purchased from Craigslist.org.
“Karl learned his building skills from his father and his eight years working in construction during the building boom in Florida,” Hari said. “It’s genetic; he comes from a long line of Latvian handy-folk.”
When the home’s exterior was done, Hari and Karl hooked up the trailer to the hitch of a U-Haul truck and headed to Virginia. There, they finished the interior of the tiny house with an apartment-sized 1950s gas range, floor-to-ceiling shelves, and a couch with cushions that lift up to reveal storage.
The refrigerator is a glass-front bottle cooler from a restaurant the Berzins owned and lost during the recession.
They heat the whole place with one 60-inch radiant baseboard heater.
The home’s living space extends to a front deck with a stainless steel prep table for cookouts and a fire pit that extends the use of the deck into the fall.
The home’s living space extends to a front deck with a stainless steel prep table for cookouts and a fire pit that extends the use of the deck into the fall.
About the only things these two didn’t build themselves were the septic system and the well. “We hired those jobs out — saved and paid cash for that work,” Hari said.
Would You Live This Way?
Would You Live This Way?
I wouldn’t last a week in a one-room cabin with my husband, my high school-age daughter, and my 80-pound hound, which led me to wonder just how Hari does it. What happens when the kids need quiet to do homework and Karl wants to watch the news on television?
“We don’t have a TV, so there’s less space we need for that,” she says. “When the kids need quiet time, we all have quiet. One might be in the loft and another is on the couch, and we spend a lot of time outside.”
What about — how do I put this delicately — quiet time alone with your spouse? “We make sure we have a day off together,” she answers. The couple enjoys their hot tub, walks in the woods, and, Hari points out, there’s a wall between the children’s loft and the parent’s loft.
Someday soon, those two adorable elementary schoolers are going to morph into privacy-hungry teens, I point out. What’s going to happen then?
Hari laughs and says she envisions helping the kids to build their own tiny homes, putting those homes on a trailer, and sending them out into the world.
Meanwhile, they do have a second-phase building plan — a move-up house that’s 16 feet by 24 feet with a loft space you can stand up in.
What are your thoughts about living this tiny, or about the tiny house movement as a whole?
“We don’t have a TV, so there’s less space we need for that,” she says. “When the kids need quiet time, we all have quiet. One might be in the loft and another is on the couch, and we spend a lot of time outside.”
What about — how do I put this delicately — quiet time alone with your spouse? “We make sure we have a day off together,” she answers. The couple enjoys their hot tub, walks in the woods, and, Hari points out, there’s a wall between the children’s loft and the parent’s loft.
Someday soon, those two adorable elementary schoolers are going to morph into privacy-hungry teens, I point out. What’s going to happen then?
Hari laughs and says she envisions helping the kids to build their own tiny homes, putting those homes on a trailer, and sending them out into the world.
Meanwhile, they do have a second-phase building plan — a move-up house that’s 16 feet by 24 feet with a loft space you can stand up in.
What are your thoughts about living this tiny, or about the tiny house movement as a whole?
Dona DeZube
has been writing about real estate for more than two decades. She lives in a suburban Baltimore Midcentury modest home on a 3-acre lot shared with possums, raccoons, foxes, a herd of deer, and her blue-tick hound. Follow Dona on Google+.
Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/blog/home-thoughts/very-small-house-family/#ixzz3je3OqFhf
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Friday, August 21, 2015
101 Things I Love about Portland Maine
Really fun atmosphere with twinkling lights and wooden beams
Delicious food and cocktails
Friday, August 14, 2015
101 Things I Love about Portland Maine
FUEL on Lisbon Street in Lewiston is a very attractive restaurant with excellent choice of cocktails and comfort foods like French Onion soup and Mac and Cheese!
The fondue is superb!!
Thursday, August 13, 2015
7 Ideas to Help You Use Your Outdoor Space More
7 Ideas to Help You Use Your Outdoor Space More
- By: Deirdre Sullivan
These ideas will transform your outdoor space into an oasis you may never want to leave.
Day or night, this cozy deck is the place to be. Plush furniture and an outdoor rug maximize comfort, and string lights cast a warm glow. Image: Summer Hogan
When your mom told you to turn off the TV and play outdoors already, she knew what she was talking about. Hanging outside is good for our mental and physical well-being.
As adults, having an outdoor retreat adds an economic component: Upwards of 80% of homebuyers said patios and front porches are “essential” or “desirable,” according to the “What Buyers Really Want” survey from the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB).
So how come when we move into our dream home, we hardly ever use our decks, porches, and patios?
An anthropological UCLA study, described in the book “Life at Home in the Twenty-First Century,” blames our fascination with digital devices — tablets, computers, televisions, games — for keeping us cooped up. The UCLA research participants spent less than half an hour each week in their outdoor space. And these were Californians.
So this summer let’s make a pledge to pay more than lip service to outdoor living so we can be happier, create lasting memories, and generally take advantage of what home has to offer.
1. Go Overboard on Comfy
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
When you step into your outdoor space, your first sensation should be ‘ahhhh’. If you’re not feeling it, then your space is likely lacking the comfy factor. Comfy is easy to achieve and can be as low cost as you want. Start simple with a cushion or two or even a throw. Some other simple strategies:
So how come when we move into our dream home, we hardly ever use our decks, porches, and patios?
An anthropological UCLA study, described in the book “Life at Home in the Twenty-First Century,” blames our fascination with digital devices — tablets, computers, televisions, games — for keeping us cooped up. The UCLA research participants spent less than half an hour each week in their outdoor space. And these were Californians.
So this summer let’s make a pledge to pay more than lip service to outdoor living so we can be happier, create lasting memories, and generally take advantage of what home has to offer.
1. Go Overboard on Comfy
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
When you step into your outdoor space, your first sensation should be ‘ahhhh’. If you’re not feeling it, then your space is likely lacking the comfy factor. Comfy is easy to achieve and can be as low cost as you want. Start simple with a cushion or two or even a throw. Some other simple strategies:
- Make sure your outdoor seating is as cushy as your indoor furniture. Today’s outdoor cushions aren’t the plastic-y, sweat-inducing pillows of the past. Plus, they can handle a downpour and spring back once they dry.
- Lay down outdoor rugs so you’re just as comfortable barefoot as you are inside.
- Give yourself some privacy. Create natural screens with shrubs, bushes, or even bamboo reeds. Or install prefab screens from your local home improvement store.
2. Create a Broadband Paradise
Our devices and electronics have conspired to keep us on lock down. Since we’re not about to chuck our digital toys, boot up your outdoor space so you can keep texting, posting to Instagram, and watching cat videos.
Our devices and electronics have conspired to keep us on lock down. Since we’re not about to chuck our digital toys, boot up your outdoor space so you can keep texting, posting to Instagram, and watching cat videos.
- Wireless outdoor Wi-Fi antennas provide an extra boost so you can stay connected.
- A solar USB charging station keeps your gizmos powered.
- Wireless speakers make it easy to bring your music outdoors, and mask a noisy neighborhood.
- An all-weather outdoor TV lets you stay outside for the big game.
3. Blur the Line Between Indoors and Out
Creating a seamless transition between your home’s interior and exterior isn’t as simple or low cost as adding comfort, but it’s the most dramatic and effective way to enhance your enjoyment of the space. Plus, it can increase your home’s value.
Creating a seamless transition between your home’s interior and exterior isn’t as simple or low cost as adding comfort, but it’s the most dramatic and effective way to enhance your enjoyment of the space. Plus, it can increase your home’s value.
- The most straightforward, cost-effective solution: Replace a standard door opening with sliding or glass French doors.
- Use the same weatherproof flooring, such as stone tile or scored concrete, outside as well as in the room leading to your backyard oasis.
4. Light the Way
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
When the sun goes down, don’t be left groping for your wine glass. Outdoor lighting dresses up your home’s marketability and appeal (exterior lighting is buyers’ most wanted outdoor feature, according to the NAHB study), makes it safer, and lets you spend more time outside.
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
When the sun goes down, don’t be left groping for your wine glass. Outdoor lighting dresses up your home’s marketability and appeal (exterior lighting is buyers’ most wanted outdoor feature, according to the NAHB study), makes it safer, and lets you spend more time outside.
- Use uplighting to highlight trees, architectural details, or other focal points.
- Add sconces or pendant lights to make evening entertaining, grilling, and reading easier.
- Illuminate walkways, rails, and steps with landscape solar lights.
- Hang fairy or string lights to set an enchanting tone.
5. Make Your Mark
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
Let your style dominate your backyard space.
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic
Let your style dominate your backyard space.
- Paint a faux rug with your favorite colors.
- Create a path made with colored glass, brick, or other interesting found materials.
- Craft a one-of-kind outdoor chandelier.
- Build a pizza oven, custom seating, or other feature you crave.
- Add personal décor that makes you happy.
In fact, make your outdoor retreat an ongoing project where you can hone your DIY skills.
6. Don’t Give Anyone an Excuse to Stay Inside
Image: Tasya Demers from My House and Home
Your outdoor space will magnetically draw family and friends if it has features they find appealing.
6. Don’t Give Anyone an Excuse to Stay Inside
Image: Tasya Demers from My House and Home
Your outdoor space will magnetically draw family and friends if it has features they find appealing.
- A fire pit is a proven winner. Food and fire have brought humans together since the dawn of time.
- Give wee ones the gift of magical thinking with an outdoor playhouse.
- Add whimsy with a chalkboard fence that both kids and fun-loving adults will enjoy.
- Add a doggie window in your fence to entertain Spot. Installing a dog run may even boost your home’s value. FYI: It’s been said that pets are one of the top reasons why people buy houses.
Related: Outdoor Projects You Can Do with the Kids
7. Rebuff the Elements
Image: LizMarieBlog.com
Hot sun, rain, wind gusts, and bugs are the archenemy of good times. Here are tips and strategies to help you throw shade on Mother Nature:
7. Rebuff the Elements
Image: LizMarieBlog.com
Hot sun, rain, wind gusts, and bugs are the archenemy of good times. Here are tips and strategies to help you throw shade on Mother Nature:
- Install an awning, canopy, or pergola. It’ll make it easier to read your Kindle or iPad and keep you dry during a summer shower. Look for products with polycarbonate panels, which block UV rays, too.
- Rig glass fence windscreens to the keep your BBQ fires burning.
- Screen in your porch or deck against bugs. But screening will be for naught if you forget the slats between wood planks. Cover the floor with outdoor carpet or staple screening to the underside of floorboards.
Deidre Sullivan is an NYC-based writer who’s obsessed with maximizing every inch of her urban dwelling. She’s a former fashionista who has worked for Lucky Magazine and InStyle. She recently traded her high heels and Fashion Week pass for a drill and bandsaw. Follow Deirdre on Google+, Twitter, and Pinterest.
Read more: http://www.houselogic.com/home-advice/decks/outdoor-living-ideas/#ixzz3ikW7nEpG
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