On June 26, 2007, we bought the house and five acres we now call home. Two years. I still don't feel like I quite fit in here....a desert habitat is certainly not where this water girl ever expected to live. Two years of joining clubs, organizations, local Chamber of Commerce... trying to make connections....for my business, yes, but also for my psyche. I'm not used to not being surrounded by friends. Two years...
A previous post:
Years ago, I came across a design book by architect Sarah Susanka called The Not So Big House.

Susanka put into words what I had been thinking for years. She believes in designing homes “that favor the quality of its space over the quantity” not "the notion that houses should be designed to impress rather than nurture.”
www.notsobighouse.comI’ve always loved small spaces. The home we lived in for almost 18 years was a cottage built in 1925.

840 square feet on the main floor.
I loved the intimacy it provided.
When we decided to move to the desert, we knew we wanted another house with a small footprint. We looked at house after house for almost 10 months. Half-way through the process, we realized moving to the most expensive part of Oregon, wanting acreage, a house, and no mortgage was going to be a problem. We had to compromise somewhere.
With much grinding of teeth, we began looking at mobile homes on acreage. My husband asked me, “Can interior decorators really live in mobile homes?”
Living in a trailer, with fake paneling, plastic cupboards, shag carpeting, vinyl flooring, aluminum siding and metal slider windows held absolutely no appeal to me.
But after watching our formerly quiet country road in Silverton, sprout 200+ McMansions over the last 10 years, we knew we wanted the peace and quiet acreage would provide.
We bought 5 acres with views of the Three Sisters (3 - 10,000'+ mountains) in Central Oregon’s High Desert.

We have 300+ days of sunshine a year, along with so much privacy I’ve yet to meet any neighbors....and we have a double-wide trailer.

Life's funny, isn’t it?