Walk-n-home
  • Homepage
  • Journey to Alaska
  • My Latest Ramblings
  • My Pics
  • About Me
  • Contact me

Chapter Eleven – The Cabin

08/25/2016 • Melissa •

The Cabin (On a Lake)

When I was nine years old, my parents decided they needed an escape from the hustle and bustle of Anchorage—which, at the time, had a population of around 100,000.

Cabin Life—No Frills, All Magic

There was no running water and no electricity. The cabin was heated by a wood-burning stove and lit with Coleman lanterns. Eventually, a propane tank was added so we could use a proper indoor cooking stove.

The outhouse—which felt like a mile away, especially on cold or dark mornings—was… let’s just say “utilitarian.”

The cabin itself was basic: a large main room with a few half-hearted partitions pretending to be bedrooms, and a sleeping loft packed with big mattresses but no actual beds.

This was one time I was very glad to be a girl—I got one of the three beds downstairs and didn’t have to “rough it” up in the loft with the boys.

I loved it. Loved the simplicity. Loved the stillness. Spending weekends there felt like heaven.

The Church of the Cabin

As an adult, when people asked me about my religious background, I’d half-jokingly say:

“I was raised in the Church of the Cabin on the Lake.”

Because once the cabin was built, we stopped going to church.

The woods and the lake became my sanctuary. That was my sacred space.

00529_s_14alqvgwc30529

Basic cabin – four walls and a roof

00531_s_14alqvgwc30531

The cabin in the morning sun

00538_s_14alqvgwc30537

Trout fishing

00536_s_14alqvgwc30535

I’d bet it was in the 60s here. I still remember the first time Anchorage hit 82—I could barely move.

00535_s_14alqvgwc30534
00534_s_14alqvgwc30533

Fishing with my brother

00562_s_14alqvgwc30562

Winter – cabin had no insulation – many times  it would be colder inside than out

00561_s_14alqvgwc30561

Loved going up there in the winter

00563_s_14alqvgwc30563

Spring is coming

00566_s_14alqvgwc30566

Springtime – temp is probably all of 50 degrees

00564_s_14alqvgwc30564

Breaking up the ice – rite of spring

00589_s_14alqvgwc30578

Lilly pads at southern end of lake

00599_s_14alqvgwc30599_d
00600_s_14alqvgwc30600
00596_s_14alqvgwc30596

The trick was to float on the surface. Touch the bottom, and the leeches would find you—inner tubes were the safe bet.

00594_s_14alqvgwc30594

On the road leading down to the path to our cabin

00607_s_14alqvgwc30607

Alaska RR — you didn’t need a station; back then you could just flag the train down to ride.

00793_s_14alqvgwc30793

Ruthie and me

00822_s_14alqvgwc30822

Our little Sunfish—fiberglassed the hull with my brother, and it could fly.

00817_s_14alqvgwc30817

Ruthie and me – March 1975

00815_s_14alqvgwc30815

Ruthie & John

00842_s_14alqvgwc30842_d

Dad – June 1976

GO TO NEXT CHAPTER

Share this:

  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print

Related

Share

Facebook Google+ Twitter Pinterest Email

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

About Me

I have a deep seated reluctance admitting to others I’m a writer.   The rules of the written English language have bedeviled me most of my life. I’ve always enjoyed writing, but throughout my many years of schooling I was consistently told I lacked the proper writing skills. I couldn’t grasp the rules of punctuation – I just wrote.

Get Social

  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Copyright 2026 Walk-n-home

Scroll Up
 

Loading Comments...