Old Cabins and Homesteads..........

The corner of the Log barn at the Historic Dunlevy Ranch on the Soda Creek McAllister Road.
DunlevyRanch2008013.jpg

The corner showing the first cross member to support the loft.
DunlevyRanch2008009.jpg

Again a slightly different corner construction dating back to the Cariboo Gold rush if I recall correctly.
 
Here's another one to add to your list. Different corners again, on this one.
Four of us had a great hune out of that cabin. Ducks and goose hunting, then last day before going home, each of us shot a deer.
13-2-2.jpg
 
The neighboring property to mine that I have permission on has this one on it.... The property owner recently put a new roof on it so that it would stay upright and he plans to make it a camp in the future.... I grouse hunt on this lnd and poften use it as my lunch spot.... fascinates me that someone would live this far in the bush for no apparent reason back when life was hard enough as it is.... Great thread looky....

bth_IMG-20121028-00400.jpg
 
Get pretty melancholy when I see stuff like this, in pictures and especially in real life. Each one of them represents weeks, months, and years, of someone's life and dreams......

Ted
 
I took these pics on a sask whitetail hunt this year. The stories those old walls could tell.

IMG_5923.jpg


IMG_5922.jpg


IMG_5924.jpg


IMG_5925.jpg

Varmit, please tell me where, near Smeaton, these pictures were taken.
I have often stated on some thread in CGN, that I grew up in that long ago age of the great depression of the 1930s, in bushland northerly Saskatchewan.
The family bush homestead was 2 miles north west of Smeaton!
In 1959 I took a picture of our old house, long vacant but still standing.
I can probably post it on here.
 
Varmit, please tell me where, near Smeaton, these pictures were taken.
I have often stated on some thread in CGN, that I grew up in that long ago age of the great depression of the 1930s, in bushland northerly Saskatchewan.
The family bush homestead was 2 miles north west of Smeaton!
In 1959 I took a picture of our old house, long vacant but still standing.
I can probably post it on here.

If you drive directly south of Smeaton for 5 miles , then take a left, which would be heading east and then 3 or 4 miles then a right to the end of the road. These old buildings border on the Fort La Corne woods. It was a beautiful spot. I also hunted northwest of Smeadon probably very close to where you lived and it was great hunting there with some very sandy roads. Now a lot of the land, even the bush is posted, so it's hard to find a good spot. We were in ML season and had great weather and saw no other hunters at all. I got a nice bear and a decent buck.
 
Last edited:
Here's another one to add to your list. Different corners again, on this one.
Four of us had a great hune out of that cabin. Ducks and goose hunting, then last day before going home, each of us shot a deer.
13-2-2.jpg

H4831 should recognise this one.........
H.....you out there?

 
If you drive directly south of Smeaton for 5 miles , then take a left, which would be heading east and then 3 or 4 miles then a right to the end of the road. These old buildings border on the Fort La Corne woods. It was a beautiful spot. I also hunted northwest of Smeadon probably very close to where you lived and it was great hunting there with some very sandy roads. Now a lot of the land, even the bush is posted, so it's hard to find a good spot. We were in ML season and had great weather and saw no other hunters at all. I got a nice bear and a decent buck.

Yes, the Fort a la Corne forest preserve is a beautiful place, fifty miles or so, east to west, Saskatchewan River through the entire length and very historic.
Only a very few miles north and west of Smeaton the arable land turns into sand ridges and swamps, and that is the end of farm land. In other words we were on the extreme northern edge of the farmland.
In the early thirties elk were everywhere, eating up the homesteaders hard earned grain crops, and many of them ended up in our roasting pan on a stove that looked a lot like the one in your picture!. As the settlers moved in, the elk moved out. Harper Lake is seven miles NW of our old homestead and an older brother, who was the hunter, used to walk or snowshoe to Harper Lake, stay with a trapper who had a cabin there, and hunt. If (virtually always) he got an elk or moose, he would come home and then go back with the team and wagon, or team and sleigh, to get the animal.
I was too young to go on any of these trips and as a result have never been to Harper Lake. I went with the family on blueberry picking trips to within about two miles of the lake, but that was it. The trail crossed a swamp of about a quarter mile across to get there.
In 1980 they had the fifty year anniversary of Smeaton and I was invited. Wife and I and a son went from BC in our 1978 Ford 150 FWD, with a camper on it. There is cultivated farm land within four miles of Harper Lake, so I thought now surely I could drive my four wheel drive truck to the Lake. Thus, at the celebration I lost no time in asking one of the oldtimers where I could pick up the trail to Harper Lake. He told me I wouldn't be able to drive to the lake! Couldn't get across the swamp, he said. After all those years, not even a 4 wheel drive trail. So, I have never seen the lake where my brother shot so much game around.
 
Well there now, Kamlooky has gone and posted a picture of the old school house I used to attend. This school however, is about thirty miles east of Smeaton, NW of Love, where we moved to later on in the thirties.
I will post a close up of part of it, to better show the log construction.
These pictures were taken about 1980, or so,
OS057.jpg
 
Not sure if these need a spot of their own or maybe combined with the nostalgic thread.
These old cabins found out in the bush just intrigue me.
If only they could share their stories.
Seems the handi work on the logs, joints and mitered ends have a place in time
and flavor too.
Here are a few to start.


Has a Scandinavian look about it that one. North Americans don't usually spend extra time on such details

Someone should put a new roof on it before it all goes to waste. Build a ladder from a split pole a la Prenneke and go to it.
 
Back
Top Bottom