Frankenkubota
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jun 11, 2020
- Messages
- 2,386
- Location
- Carthage NC...Deep in the woods
- Tractor
- Kubota MX 5800, SkidPro 4 in 1, Ratchet rake, SkidPro pallet forks
yea butBack in the mid nineties my wife and I decided to look for some land. We settled on 10 acres for size because that's what we could afford. Living in Redmond Washington we looked for land on our side of the Cascades. After looking at places far away from us, where the prices were low enough, we were not having much luck. My wife then suggested looking on Whidbey Island. I had not even considered looking on any of the islands. And Whidbey was only 20 miles away, plus the ferry, so it was the closest place we had looked.
Because of the ferry property on Whidbey was much less than property on the mainland in the same proximity to Redmond. The ferry was really not much of a hindrance for us at that time. But it was a psychological hindrance for lots of folks so land was cheaper by about half.
We looked at all sorts of parcels up and down the 50 mile long island. All the 10 acre parcels we could afford were rejected by us for various rreasons Then we were shown a place on a short dead end road that was not advertised yet but was for sale. We offered 80 grand for it with the proviso that it would perc for a standard septic system. It did. We bought it.
The price was excellent at the time but this was because the previous buyer had turned about 1/2 acre of it into a junk pile. My wife was really dubious, she was having a hard time seeing past all the tons of junk. Plus there was a small house that was condemned by the ccounty. But my 17 year old son and I could see the potential.
We had to work hard to dispose of the junk. I hauled off 7 or 8 tons of scrap steel and 5 tons of aluminum scrap. The money from the scrap more than paid for the disposal cost of 95 tires. There were 6 or 7 cars too but the seller had agreed to haul them off and he did. We got the fire department to burn the house for us as a training exercise. We invited a bunch of friends to watch and had a great party.
Since I didn't want to commute I decided to become self employed. I gave my boss a 1 year notice and built a shop on the property. During the 1 year time period we cleaned up the property, drilled a well, got power and phone onto the property, put in a septic system, sold our house, and rented a cabin on the beach.
I started working in my new shop and we started designing our house to be built on our now cleaned up property. Things were going well, I was making good money, house plans were coming along but we kept changing our minds about it but finally had finished plans in hand. Then I was riding my Norton home on our short road, went around a blind turn 700 feet from our driveway, and was struck head on by a pickup on my side of the road. I was two feet from the side of the road, on the inside of the curve. The truck was completely in my lane. Even though I was only going about 15 mph he was going faster. The immediate result of the collision was both wrists crushed, bones sticking out of both arms, pelvis broken in front and back, and a helicopter ride to Harborview Hospital.
After two years of reconstructive bone surgeries, 4 bone grafts, tendon re-attachments, and lots of physical therapy I was working pretty steadily again. We never did get the house built and had to sue the guy who hit me. His insurance company, Farmers, offered only 60 grand. My first night in the hospital cost more than that. 10 hours in the operating room is expensive.
Finally, after settling the lawsuit in our favor we got our house built. That was about 12 years ago. We changed the location for the house and so could not use the original septic system. The original septic still serves the shop though. When the house was complete we still had no septic and all the reputable septic installers were busy for 6 or more months out. So I bought a backhoe, even though I knew nothing about them and put in my own septic system, even though at the time I knew nothing about them either.
Right after we bought the property I decided I wanted to roast a pig and start a tradition. This last August I roasted my 25th pig. I have only missed two years, the year I got hit because I was in a wheel chair and had pins coming out of both arms connected to external framework holding my bones in place, and 2020 because of the virus.
We now have a beautiful place. Trails through the woods. Great water. Two, count 'em, two septic systems. A Yanmar YM2310 tractor. A Case 580 CK backhoe. About 1 acre out of the 10 total developed. And it looks great. We still sometimes can't believe how lucky we are that we get to live in such a beautiful place in such a wonderful community.
Eric
what about the Norton!