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Cottage Life

Tools, barbecues, thermostats, and trees among Lowe’s Black Friday deals

If you’re in the market for a faux Christmas tree, barbecue, tools, thermostat, or home tech products, Lowe’s has got some pretty good Black Friday deals going on right now. Get an additional $10 off your purchase of $50 or more (before tax) by signing up for their newsletter. Here’s what we found:

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Cottage Life

Our favourite 2021 Black Friday deals from Roots

If you choose to purchase any of these products through the links provided, we may earn a small commission. Read more about our Editorial Policy here.

For Black Friday this year, Roots has up to 40 per cent off select styles (unfortunately this doesn’t apply to their uber-popular salt and pepper colour). Sale items are also subject to an additional 25 per cent off which is applied at checkout. You have a few days to mull over any potential purchases as the sale is running until Monday, November 29. You can receive free standard shipping (2-4 business days for Ontario and Quebec) on orders of $70 or more.

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Cottage Life

Do dogs laugh?

Every dog owner knows that dogs love to play. Whether it’s roughhousing with other pups or engaging in games with humans, dogs know how to have a good time. This begs the question: do dogs laugh? Well, you might be surprised at the answer. We’re here to let you in on some dog playtime secrets.

What is play panting?

Dogs make all kinds of vocalizations when they play, including barks, whines, and growls. But have you ever heard your dog panting in the middle of a game? Turns out that’s not from exertion. Research from the late Patricia Simonet showed that the breathy panting dogs do while playing is special. When Simonet analyzed the sound waves of play pants and compared them to recordings of regular pants, there was a distinct difference.

But does that mean anything to dogs? Yes. In fact, play pants can initiate fun and games. When dogs hear a play pant from another dog, they respond with playful behaviour, such as making a play face (a relaxed open mouth), giving play bows (bum up and chest down), or chasing. Dogs will even engage in these actions if the play pant comes from a human! To further explore the function of the play pant, Simonet played recordings of these sounds to shelter dogs and found that they lowered the dogs’ stress levels and encouraged them to be more social.

Do dogs laugh?

So, does the play pant qualify as dog laughter? Simonet thought so. And what else would you call it? Unlike barks, whines, and growls which dogs use in many contexts, play pants only occur when a dog is having fun. Plus, just like human laughter, it seems to be infectious, eliciting play behaviour when dogs simply hear the sound. If we giggle and guffaw when we’re having fun, why shouldn’t dogs?

How can you encourage your dog to play?

Can you use play pants to strike up a game with your dog? Absolutely. It sounds like a forced and breathy exhalation. To make a play pant, you need to laugh without the vowel sounds. So a simple “Hah, hah, hah” but instead of pronouncing the “ah” at the end, just expel air. Try it with your dog and see how they respond.

To be even more playful, you can learn to speak your dog’s body language as well. But be aware, research from scientist Nicola Rooney found that many of the commonly used play signals humans give their dogs are the least successful at getting the dog to play. For example, kissing your dog, picking up your dog, or patting the floor are unlikely to start a game. Instead, try one of the more effective signals from Rooney’s study. Bow to your dog so your torso is parallel with the ground. Or get on the ground and give a doggie play bow. Or how about a quick forward lunge towards your dog? Finally, try a chase signal by moving rapidly towards or away from your dog. All these signals, especially paired with a play pant, are sure to get your dog laughing.

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Cottage Life

Black Friday apparel deals from your favourite brands (like The North Face, PAJAR, Columbia and Roots)

If you choose to purchase any of these products through the links provided, we may earn a small commission. Read more about our Editorial Policy here.

Black Friday is the time to invest in a new barbeque or flatscreen television, but you can also save quite a bit by strategically timing your purchase of a new winter parka or high-quality socks. Here are the deals cottagers should check out for clothing and accessories this year.

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Cottage Life

Black Friday deals we can’t resist from SAIL

If you choose to purchase any of these products through the links provided, we may earn a small commission. Read more about our Editorial Policy here.

Black Friday is here! If you’ve been waiting on that kayak to go on sale or are in need of a new winter coat, you can find some pretty good deals at SAIL right now. Some products are up to 50 per cent off, but you can score an even better deal by using some third-party platforms such as Rakuten to get cashback on your purchases. They also offer a 10 per cent off coupon for clearance items, if you sign up for their mailing list. We’ve rounded up some of the best deals on equipment and apparel at SAIL.

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Cottage Life

The Black Friday deals cottagers need to know about

If you choose to purchase any of these products through the links provided, we may earn a small commission. Read more about our Editorial Policy here.

Whether you’re planning for summer water sports or just trying to get some new cottage kitchen essentials, these are the Black Friday deals that can save you hundreds. Here are the great deals on everything from kayaks to coffee makers to home security systems for yourself or the cottager in your life.

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Cottage Life

Buy the Way: This family bought a ‘trottage’ in Muskoka

The backstory: Growing up in a working-class Toronto family in the 1970s, Susana Martinez didn’t have many opportunities to vacation in rural Ontario. “We couldn’t afford to rent a cottage, let alone buy one,” she says. But when she was 10, her parents splurged on an all-inclusive stay at Elgin House, a lakeside resort on Lake Joseph, Ont. Susana, now a 53-year-old client service administrator for a Toronto wealth management company, has fond memories of waterskiing and long nature hikes from that rare childhood trip. “I fell in love with the calming effect of being near the water,” she says.

Years later, she was keen to share those same experiences with her husband, Ben Bull, a 53-year-old IT security consultant, and her four kids. In 2008, they began renting cottages in Muskoka and the Kawarthas every summer. After three years, they noticed rentals were getting pricier: a two-week stay in a cottage to accommodate their family of six could cost as much as $4,000. When her mother passed away in 2011, Susana received a small inheritance that got her and Ben thinking. They wanted a place in Muskoka, which was a convenient two-hour drive from Toronto. A cottage was out of their price range, but what if they got a trailer in the same area? 

“It took some convincing for me,” says Susana. “I wrongly associated trailers with the rundown yards and doors hanging off hinges that you’d see in TV shows like Trailer Park Boys.”

The compromise: Susana soon discovered that her preconceptions about trailer parks were ill-founded. In July 2012, she and Ben came across a Kijiji listing for a trailer in Port Severn’s Hidden Glen on Georgian Bay—what is now a gated community less than two hours from Toronto. Sited on the water, the trailer was in excellent condition and came with a new front deck, as well as a dock. It had 600 sq. ft. of living space, with a double bedroom, kitchen, and bathroom, as well as an extension with enough room for the kids to sleep. The trailer was listed just under $60,000, but after a quick negotiation, Susana and Ben bought it within their budget for $50,000. They also had to pay approximately $4,500 (it has since increased to $6,000) in annual dues to lease their lot from Hidden Glen, which also covers park maintenance and septic pump-out.

the front deck of the trottage looking out over the lake
Photo by Susana Martinez

They spent about $6,000 on upgrades including a back deck and new bedroom floors. Dubbing their new retreat the “Trottage,” the family visited most weekends and for the holidays. Susana and Ben, who don’t own a car, spend $140 on a rental per weekend.  

The silver lining: With their children now grown up (their youngest is 18), Susana and Ben realized they wouldn’t be using their trailer as much. So last September, they sold a third share of their lease to a friend, who will spend time there when the couple isn’t using it and pay a portion of the annual dues. They plan on keeping their trailer as a possible retirement getaway. “Having a place to escape to has been so important,” says Susana. “This has been the spot where we can all relax and share time together, no matter what else is going on.”

Susana’s three reasons to embrace trottage life

1. A million-dollar cottage view—for a fraction of the price
Susana knows that she won’t be getting the same return on her investment that a cottage would offer since Hidden Glen owns the land that her trailer sits on. “But it’s still an investment in my quality of life,” she says. “Plus, I wouldn’t be able to afford this little slice of Muskoka waterfront otherwise.”

2. Built-in communities
Trailer parks offer lots of opportunities to socialize and take part in events such as horseshoe tournaments and disco nights. “It’s been great for our kids to share this park with so many other families,” says Susana. “We’ve also built close friendships with neighbours who we even vacation with outside the park.”

3. Less upkeep
“In the spring, all I have to do is put out the outdoor furniture and do a little cleaning,” says Susana. “With a cottage, it can take days to get things in order.” Another trailer perk: for a $100 annual fee, Hidden Glen takes care of winterizing her trailer in the fall. “For that price, somebody else does it for us, and we don’t have to worry about the pipes bursting—it’s great.”

Did you recently buy a cottage in a non-traditional way? We’d love to hear about it! Email alysha@cottagelife.com.

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Cottage Life

Off-season? Not for the locals in cottage-land

This essay about living in the off-season was originally published “Life in a northern town” in the Winter 2020 issue of Cottage Life.

As a kid who spent all summer at the cottage, the annual arrival of the Canadian National Exhibition carried double-edged significance. On one hand, it promised fun and excitement, unchecked gluttony at the food hall, and the terrifying possibility of vomiting on one of the loud and violent rides.

But it also meant summer was officially over and soon it would be time for the drudgery of school. When the CNE opened, cottage-land—the best amusement park ever invented—closed for the season.

I have now lived full-time in cottage-land for a little over 20 years, much of that working at a small business where cottagers were our regular customers, along with local neighbours, travellers, and tourists from all points on the map. This year it was a COVID-19 bust, but normally, when I hear that the CNE will be opening soon, my heart gives a little pitty-pat of joy, because it means that very shortly my town and the everyday routines of the people who live year-round in cottage country will return to normalcy.

I consider it a rare blessing to be able to live in this place of water and rocks and trees. Every season has a special beauty, and there is plenty of wilderness, space, and solitude. Which is why so many cottagers have made it, or hope to make it, their year-round home. That’s the wrinkle to living in an attractive locale; everybody else wants to share the experience, and who could possibly blame them? The downside for small towns, and the people who live in them, is a dramatic seasonal population explosion that at times can seem overwhelming. In the District of Muskoka, seasonal residents represent more than 57 per cent of the population. That varies town by town, of course. In Huntsville, where I live, permanent people outnumber seasonals almost 3:1. But in smaller townships such as Georgian Bay, where seasonal residents constitute almost 87 per cent of the population, those numbers are powerfully reversed. When you consider that these figures don’t include tourists and travellers and leaf-lookers, never mind the organized mayhem of triathlons and craft beer festivals, it’s easy to see how small places quickly fill to bursting in peak season.

This uptick in population obviously has pros and cons in a small-town economy. For those of us who work in businesses that rely on seasonal tourism—which is most everybody—boom time means business time and money in the bank. But it also means long hours, little time off, and a sense of sweeping invasion as traffic snarls and parking spots disappear. Banks and stores are jammed and local restaurants and watering holes are crowded to capacity. That scene, of course, was pre–pandemic. But it will return again, when things get back to normal. When a few routine errands that would normally take an hour will devour the best part of a day, if they can be completed at all. And sometimes patience wears thin. Sometimes tempers flare. It’s at these moments of maximum summer that my little town starts to exhibit the crappier aspects of the city I escaped from many years ago. This is when I sometimes curse summer tourists, in all their various guises, as “those goddamn ice-cream eaters.”

But it’s not as if this phenomenon is new. Summer in cottage country has probably been this way since well-heeled people wearing boiled wool suits started coming here on trains and steamboats. It’s all part of the rhythm of the seasons, and the overheated, overcrowded, overly busy summer is but one part of the tourist town equation. The other part, and maybe the better one for locals at least, starts to show its face when traffic in cottage places starts to thin out a bit. Traditionally, Labour Day signalled the end of summer and a drastic decline in tourism. Some cottagers would return for closing-up and the ritual of Thanksgiving by the lake, but by mid-September the high season was pretty much over. Like someone flipped a switch. In normal, non-pandemic years, the subtle slide into off-season calm is more drawn out—and busier later into the year—as European tourists arrive to enjoy fine autumn weather, and the population features more retired people, who are masters of their own schedules. More like a dimmer than an on/off switch.

Still, it is quieter. And my first luxury of the dimmer season is to be able to visit my own cottage for more than the night or two I usually manage in July and August. Not long ago, before we sold our store, my summers were spent serving cottage customers, and when I can finally get to my own place, I truly appreciate the experience. It might be too cold for swimming and broiling in the sun, but it feels like an exotic vacation for me. Just doing normal cottage chores is a welcome respite from grinding it out for six days a week, because working on cottage projects, as we all know, is not the same as real work. Leaving the town you live in every day can make four nights up at the lake seem like a two-week vacation, and with a little rest and relaxation, the sweaty hustle of maximum summer eventually slips into the rearview mirror. The return to relative normalcy also means getting to do touristy stuff like going for a hike in Algonquin Provincial Park or improvising a road trip from town to town, cruising for junk store treasure and maybe even, miracle of miracles, stopping at some rinky-dink place to eat an ice cream cone.

For people who live in cottage country and work in businesses defined by summer tourism, fall and winter give opportunities to reconnect with friends and neighbours, people you don’t see all summer, especially if they too are part of the intense tourist economy. In the fall, regularity returns for everyone as kids head back to school and the routines of work life, hockey leagues, and dance class kick in. Still busy, but a more measured tempo.

Grocery shopping or cruising the aisles at Canadian Tire can once again be a mildly pleasurable activity. The global pandemic has thrown a wrench into the works, of course, but in a normal year this is the time to meet friends for wings and beer, host a dinner party, or just hang out in someone’s garage working on a four-wheeler, without having to be anyplace in a screaming hurry.

The first broken spoke on the Ferris wheel of cottage-land shows up in late November, when the weather usually turns abysmal, and pretty much runs until Christmas. Dark and cold and sullen, it’s no longer autumn, nor is it proper winter by a long shot. A good time for many to fly somewhere warm. For me it’s a time of making and mending, starting new projects and trying to finish others.

The high point of this period is hunting season, moose first then whitetail deer, as solo hunters get some bush time, and the big family camps hit full stride, carrying on traditions that are as precious to them as any cottager’s hard-earned summer stint at the lake. For many people who work without cease all summer, hunting season is their most cherished and inviolable vacation. It’s a tradition that many cottagers don’t get, and it’s hard not to laugh when I hear from someone who can’t understand why they aren’t getting call-backs from their plumber during the first week of deer season.

When you are a local, the sometimes bizarre behaviour of tourists can be hilarious, like trying to make a U-turn on main street on a summer Saturday (impossible) or seeing a troop of urban hipsters with matching beards and slim-fit bush jackets get carded at the pub. One year, a lady drove her car over the edge at the waste transfer station and landed inside a dumpster.

At our store we’d regularly chuckle at the sight of keen survivalists strapped with 10″ Bowie knives, ready for their weekend of provincial park camping. Not hilarious is the off-hand rudeness offered to servers at restaurants and high-speed dangerous driving on cottage roads. Garbage is a problem, whether it’s regular litter or full bags of trash left by my driveway, in the parking lot of our store, or tossed on the side of the highway. There are a lot of people trying to squeeze into cottage country during the summer. And it stands to reason that a small percentage of them will be irresponsible jerks.

When I first moved to cottage country, I was surprised to find an us-versus-them attitude, at times quite ugly, held by some locals. They are a minority of people who complain bitterly about “citiots” and “tourrorists,” those non-specific ignorant visitors who, as certain vocal locals see it, have all joined together to make local lives a misery. Taking a page from the racist playbook, they think outsiders should just go back to where they came from. Everybody has heard commentary from these yobs before, and most just dismiss the moron minority. But I know many cottage people who are deeply hurt by this kind of talk, surprised to hear it because they consider themselves part of the community, many having come here for generations. They shop in town, support local hospitals and charities, and have made long-lasting ties within the community. And this is the response? With the first pandemic’s first spring came even more small-town small mind, as each little jurisdiction wagged frightened fingers at their nearest neighbour, all of them decrying the imminent hordes of big city cottagers charging north to gobble up food and supplies, spread disease, and congest hospitals. Which as we know, simply did not happen. The reality is that anyone involved in a small-town, tourist-based economy, especially the business owners, builders, trades, retailers, and service providers who cater to cottage customers, knows that without support from “outsiders,” there would be no local economy whatsoever. But just like everywhere else it is found, this chronic resentment toward “rich and privileged” visitors is driven by economic inequity. A summer snapshot of cottage country might depict shiny happy people having fun, but in the District of Muskoka, just 28 per cent of permanent households earn more than $100,000 annually, compared to 76 per cent for seasonal residents—a situation that would grow exponentially more dire if cottagers and visitors stopped spending money in cottage towns and “just went back where they came from.”

Winter in cottage country is, obviously, simply amazing. I’ve always liked the cold season, but up here its best parts are magnified and more exceptional, the silence above all, as the whole world gets blanketed in a sound-absorbing mantle of snow. It’s also at this time, but only when the ice is good and thick, that I can revisit my island cottage, hauling in weeks’ worth of supplies with a snowmobile.

A few years ago, I made a simple groomer for the trails around my property at home, so now there is a network of smooth winter boulevards for snowshoeing, skiing, and cutting firewood to heat the house. It’s important to get outside. Hunkering down indoors with Netflix and a stack of cookbooks is the surest path to an interminable and miserable four months. Do I get frustrated by January thaws that make everything melt and reset the fun odometer? Sure I do. And does moving mountains of snow from my driveway get a bit tired by March? Absolutely. But there’s nowhere I would rather live, especially in January and February when cottage country is mostly left to locals.

After my move north, it was always fun to make occasional random trips back to the big city for food and shopping and nightlife. But as the years went by, and my age advanced with them, those trips became less interesting to me and more infrequent. These days, my preferred direction of travel is due north, to my new version of cottage-land. There are no hot-and-bothered crowds on my island, no sense of invasion even on the busiest summer days, and it’s the place I like to be and think about all the time.

No matter where they live, I’m pretty sure this is something all cottagers share. At our store, during the boiling panic of summer, I would routinely ask Friday afternoon cottage road warriors about the traffic on the way up, especially if I’d heard of an accident or a lane closure on the radio. Without fail, rather than grumble or complain about the worst-drive-ever, most people would simply give a tired smile and say: “I’m just happy to be here.”

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Cottage Life

Waterfront cottage rentals in the Kawartha Lakes under $300 a night

Location: Balsam Lake

Price: Averages $250 per night

Sleeps: 8

Bedrooms: 3

Notes:

  • Canoe and kayak available for use
  • Laundry on site
  • Less than two hours from Toronto

Click here to book

Location: Fenelon Falls river

Price: Averages $275 per night

Sleeps: 8

Bedrooms: 2

Notes:

  • Canoe, kayak, and paddleboards available for use
  • Laundry on site
  • Air conditioning
  • Pets welcome

Click here to book

Location: Sturgeon Lake

Price: Averages $285 per night

Sleeps: 7

Bedrooms: 2

Notes:

  • Aluminum boat with paddles available for us
  • Bunkie with a queen bed available for an additional fee (see pictures)
  • Propane barbecue (propane supplied)
  • Dock can accommodate up to a 24-foot boat

Click here to book

Location: South shore of Balsam Lake

Price: Averages $200 per night

Sleeps: 6

Bedrooms: 3

Notes:

  • No pets allowed
  • $500 refundable damage deposit
  • Lots of parking

Click here to book

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Cottage Life

Built to last: How a Pan-Abode cedar cabin connects three generations

As cottagers, we constantly look to the future. We can’t wait for the start of summer, for the next long weekend, and for the moment when we turn off the paved road and onto the winding gravel at the end of a Friday-evening commute. But for those of us who grew up spending summers at the lake, the cottage is our closest connection to our past—especially if a family member built it by hand.

That’s certainly the case for Tom Vandewater, whose father, Jim, built his family’s cottage using one of the original Pan-Abode log-cabin kits. “In 1959 my dad bought a piece of land sight-unseen on an island on Go Home Lake,” Tom says. “Ontario was selling off crown land in the area, and he won his bid on a plot that he liked.” Since it was two decades before Tom and his sister were born, a simple, sturdy cabin was all Jim needed. “He had to build within two years, so he bought a Pan-Abode kit, which he built with friends and beer.”

Three of Jim’s friends, each of whom were engineers, purchased island plots at the same time, and while Jim’s finance career didn’t have much carryover to cottage building, his Pan-Abode cabin went up a lot more quickly than those of his construction-savvy buddies. “They were using math—my dad just followed the instructions,” Tom explains.

Anyone who has built so much as a bunkie on Canadian Shield knows how difficult the process can be, but for Jim and his Pan-Abode cabin, it went off without a hitch, and the build was completed over the course of six weekends. “He was done, and everyone else who was building from scratch or from other kits would be a third of the way through. Meanwhile, Dad was sitting with a roof over his head and pouring drinks,” Tom says. “If it was raining, he’d let them stay at his place while they were building because they were still putting walls up with two-by-fours and cladding.”

Room to grow

While the original Pan-Abode cabin was the perfect summer getaway for Jim, his growing family eventually needed more space. “Once my mom arrived on the scene, the outhouse wasn’t to her specifications, so a bathroom was put in,” Tom says. “And we needed more space in the ’80s after my sister and I were born, so we built a two-storey addition with a giant loft in ’86 with my sister and me helping.” Since the addition had to match the quality and appearance of the original cabin—and fit with the original plan—the family contacted the Pan-Abode team, who customized a plan to give them extra space.

Soon it was time to grow again. When Tom and his sister started having kids of their own and bringing them up to the lake each summer, they realized they needed even more room. This time, instead of another addition, the family decided a whole new structure was in order. Naturally, they returned to Pan-Abode for a plan that would match the original cabin from the early ’60s. “We wanted a place where Mom wouldn’t wake up at 5 a.m. with our kids yelling and demanding Frosted Flakes,” Tom jokes. They decided on the Quadra, a cozy two-bedroom cabin with wide windows and an open kitchen. “The lot was big enough that we could build a sleeping cabin, so I emailed Pan-Abode to see if they could modify the plan based on our site layout and where we wanted the front door.”

The DIY approach

With the modified plan in hand and Pan-Abode’s pre-cut Western red cedar logs transported to the island, Tom and his brother-in-law set about building the new sleeper cabin themselves. They put up the walls and even tackled the plumbing, though they relied on a contractor to hook up the septic system and get the water up from the lake. “It was a good two-year project that took five years, but with Pan-Abode, the easiest part was building the actual walls of the cabin. You put them together like a puzzle, and it just works,” he says.

Throughout the evolution of that initial plot of land, the family never questioned whether they’d continue using Pan-Abode. “In terms of DIY, it’s great. The logs are all pre-cut, and the walls going up is far and away the easiest part of the process,” Tom says. Part of the reason it’s so easy is that Pan-Abode not only pre-cuts the logs, but they also label them with numbers that make them simple to organize and fit together with clear instructions using the company’s patented “lock joint” building system.

Customization and quality

The ability to customize any Pan-Abode plan was a key feature for Tom. “They handled all of the modifications, and it was fantastic,” he says. “They’d send me a plan, I’d request changes, and they’d make them while accounting for all of the engineering that goes into the structure.” In fact, it’s rare for Pan-Abode’s customers to stick to the original design. Many modify the plan to suit their property, whether it’s rearranging the window placement to make the most of their view (or minimize their neighbour’s view) or rethinking the subfloor based on the type of foundation that’s required for local code. Colours are a key choice, too—everything from the type of roof to the material that frames the windows—and an interactive guidebook on the Pan-Abode site simplifies the selection process.

While the DIY building process was a main draw, it was also the enduring quality of the original cabin that brought Tom back to Pan-Abode. And that craftsmanship is rooted in the choice of materials, particularly the Western red cedar. “We wanted to stick with Pan-Abode because we already knew the lack of maintenance their wood requires compared to our friends on the lake, who are constantly fixing things,” he explains.

Not only is Western red cedar a low-maintenance wood, but it’s also insect and rot resistant, and it’s far easier on the environment. Even the stains that Pan-Abode uses have low or no VOC content, as you might expect from a Canadian company based in British Columbia. Pan-Abode’s commitment to sustainability was a huge factor for Tom and his family. “We know where they get their logs from, and we know that they harvest it sustainably,” he says. “I don’t think it was as much of a consideration in 1960, but it definitely is today.”

Building memories

Of course, the quality of the building materials means nothing if they don’t add up to a final product that customers love. And it’s the experience of being inside the cabin that Tom appreciates the most. “When you walk in, the smell is just fantastic. Even in the original cottage, you know you’re in a cedar cabin immediately. The wood is sixty years old, but it still has that aromatic cedar quality,” he says. “There’s something about the cedar they use. It just looks incredible. It’s so clear and beautiful—there’s barely a knot if you can find one.”

Pan-Abode pays close attention to both the appearance and practicality of the wood. For all external-facing parts of the logs, the company has a best-face policy to keep the cedar as clear as possible, because even though knots are a natural part of wood, they’re potential weak spots for weather and critters to get in. On the flip side, the interior walls feature knots and rich grain to bring out the wood’s characteristic beauty. And while Pan-Abode does its part to provide gorgeous, high-quality Western red cedar, Tom also loves knowing that he played a role in creating new cottage memories for his family by building it himself. “Aside from the beauty, there’s something about just being inside of it,” he says. “You can sit and look around and think, I built this.”

Thinking of building your own dream cottage at the lake? Learn more about Pan-Abode’s custom log-cabin kits at panabode.com