Give a Sustainable Christmas Gift

Happy Holidays to the tiny house curious! Your chance to get or gift a sustainable e-book this holiday!

50% OFF either e-book thru Tuesday, December 31, 2019! 

Discount Code when you hit either PayPal button below is : XMAS19

Empower yourself, a loved one or friend with a sustainable lifestyle gift!

“Living The Sustainable Tiny Life” envelops the reader into a world that is vastly changing in ways that are new and different, but also familiar to the reader. Her book takes on an almost therapeutic aura as she welcomes you into her thought processes, resources, successes, and failures over decades of social change. After reading The Sustainable Tiny Life I feel inspired to not only live a more simple and meaningful life, but also to do more for our planet as a consumer and advocate. This book is for anyone who is interested in leading a healthier life for themselves and for future generations.” —— Christina D. Mecca BSW Researcher and Life Coach

$25.00

PayPal 50% Off Checkout Discount Code:  XMAS19   

 

Living the Sustainable Lifestyle Workbook is wonderful!!! One of the pieces that others often miss is that experiencing a truly successful tiny house experience requires more than simply moving into smaller square footage. A change in lifestyle and awareness is also necessary for the best results. Your workbook takes readers through various pertinent and important exercises that will best prepare them for an amazing new life. It’s obvious that you have learned a lot from your life experiences and making your own move to tiny, so you’re a great author to put this all together. The workbook would have been helpful for us when we got started on our own tiny house and downsizing journey!! “    ——Gabriella Morrison, Tiny House Build

$20.00

PayPal 50% Off Checkout Discount Code: XMAS19

 

Join me at the Mass. Tiny House Festival

Please come and join all the tiny house movement ‘curious’ and some of the movement’s leaders at the 5th Mass. Tiny House Festival in my Northshore Boston backyard!

This year, the festival is only a few miles from where the sustainable Silver Bullet is permanently parked. Come and tour all the micro lifestyle’s featured in tiny houses, schoolies, buses, wagons, box trucks and other structures. There are vendors, food, music and speakers from the tiny house movement. Your opportunity to learn all about the micro-living lifestyle!

I’ll be speaking Saturday at 4:15PM about the 5 elements of sustainable tiny living that are detailed in both my books about my tiny house journey/build and how to design your own sustainable lifestyle. (Books are 50% off from  Oct.19-30, Code: SB19)

Come by and say hello and meet my tiny house friends!

Tickets here.

Tiny House Books Make Great Holiday Gifts

Happy Holidays from us to YOU!       Ten Days until Christmas to purchase BOTH Vera’s e-Books for 50% OFF!

Empower yourself or empower a friend with a gift! PayPal Checkout Discount Code: XMAS2

“Living The Sustainable Tiny Life” envelops the reader into a world that is vastly changing in ways that are new and different, but also familiar to the reader. Her book takes on an almost therapeutic aura as she welcomes you into her thought processes, resources, successes, and failures over decades of social change. After reading The Sustainable Tiny Life I feel inspired to not only live a more simple and meaningful life, but also to do more for our planet as a consumer and advocate. This book is for anyone who is interested in leading a healthier life for themselves and for future generations.” —— Christina D. Mecca-McClory BSW Researcher and Life Coach

PayPal 50% Off Checkout Discount Code: XMAS2 

 

Living the Sustainable Lifestyle Workbook is wonderful!!! One of the pieces that others often miss is that experiencing a truly successful tiny house experience requires more than simply moving into smaller square footage. A change in lifestyle and awareness is also necessary for the best results. Your workbook takes readers through various pertinent and important exercises that will best prepare them for an amazing new life. It’s obvious that you have learned a lot from your life experiences and making your own move to tiny, so you’re a great author to put this all together. The workbook would have been helpful for us when we got started on our own tiny house and downsizing journey!! “    ——Gabriella Morrison, Tiny House Build

PayPal 50% Off Checkout Discount Code: XMAS2

 

Silver Bullet Tiny House Tour Dispatch #1

Touring with a tiny house is an adventure! I’ll be giving an official dispatch with pictures and lessons learned. This post is long but informative, I’ll try to make them shorter and more often in the future. I just haven’t had the bandwidth or wifi to do so.

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I fulfilled my five year old dream on June 1st by taking the Silver Bullet Tiny House on its first tour*. Grit and gumption are words I would use to describe the character traits one must possess for a tiny house journey, its build, and a road tour. Attempting a cross-country tiny house sustainable lifestyle education tour at age 67, alone, was described by some friends and colleagues as “plumb crazy”. Well, you know what, I was up for the challenge.

Before May, I had never driven a pick up truck, nor a trailer, nor a 10,000 pound load anywhere, much less on interstate highways.

I have been to 49 of our 50 Unites States of America. Everywhere I go, I am used to meeting so many creative, amazing folks. This tour is not any different.

With this 10,000 pound load and a case of the nerves, I stopped at every rest stop and turnpike plaza. As you can see from the pictures I met an older ford hotrod and another tiny dweller along the way. I passed through four states in lovely sunny weather.

My first night I spent in a ginormous truck stop with 165 spaces. That night was so much fun meeting all the trucker couples carrying the country’s commerce on their backs.Being dyslexic, the thought of going in reverse scares me.Luckily, I have managed to always go forward.

I really was not prepared for all the honking, filming and smartphone camera shots while I was driving and every time I stopped. Now I know what the rest of the tiny house tribe was talking about! I guess I’m going to have to comb my hair a tad more often.

I headed to a location just outside Philadelphia for my first Pop-up Tour at a sponsor’s location; Benjamin Obdyke’s parking lot in Horsham PA. was spacious and well suited to meeting the hundred or so visitors we accommodated the next day from their company, the curious public and the Philadelphia meet-up groups. Hats off to the PB & J food vendor who delivered a lovely, gourmet dinner for me before I packed up.

The Top 5 Tiny House Tour questions asked of me so far:

  1. What is a building envelope and why was rain screen important in your bio-mimicry design?
  2. Can you really project livestreaming video with your projector on a window shade instead of having a TV?
  3. What are those cool awnings?
  4. What mixture and proportions are in your compost toilet?
  5. How come your grill and coffeepot can charge your phone and computer?

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Good questions! And here are my answers:

  1. building envelope is the physical separator between the conditioned and unconditioned environment of a building including the resistance to air, water, heat, light, and noise transfer. Benjamin Obdyke’s rain screen is one important layered element of this design. Read more here.
  2. Yes, you can. When you are near WiFi, download your favorite shows, movies, etc. from Netflix, Xfinity or whomever, on your smartphone (this saves data charges). Project directly from your unit; mine is an HD Brookstone. I do this on my thick smooth bay window shade. I also have done this on the side of a barn! Or use your phone as a hotspot, if you have a good data plan.
  3. Those wicked cool awnings are a polycarbonate material I was introduced to years ago when helping Deek at one of his workshops. It is Tuftex. See me on the road or at the Tiny House Jamboree, August 5-7th in Colorado Springs (Vendor Booth #13- next to Onduline) and I’ll tell you all about it! I chose a clear panel so that weather deflects from my windows and yet I still have the benefit of light. They are very good for saving my windows from damage on the interstates as well.
  4. One part organic cedar chips and one part organic peat moss; mix together and put in a container. I also add my daily Hazelnut coffee grounds. My “bucket” has my own DIY urine diverter.
  5. I have used Biolite products for five years, since their early beginnings. I have their grille, their stove, the teapot, and their lights. And I love plugging in to recharge my tech components.

Luckily I left early before the local festival closed off the streets surrounding me. Heading for the Christian Klay Vineyard for my next Pop-up Tour/Workshop certainly kept me on my toes. Checking my rear view mirror I saw my Tuftex side door flopping in and out. Stuff is going to happen out there, so have your power tools and extra pieces of wood and screws handy. I was back on the road in minutes.

The Pennsylvania Turnpike has several low-clearance bridges and tunnels – that is, in the right lane several are only 13’2″. So keep your eyes open!
Blog1.2For my last stretch, I should have been to my friend’s vineyard in a few hours. The weather was not cooperating in the mountains and so I went turnpike plaza to turnpike plaza waiting for the thunder, lightning and squalls to abate.I just hopped in my tiny, cracked a good book and relaxed.Blog1

The Christian Klay Winery is beautiful upon approach, even in bad weather. The hundreds of acres of mountaintop vineyards, ponds and many barns have histories that only its charming vintner, Sharon Klay, can tell with flare and style as she drives you through her vineyard.

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Sharon and I met many decades ago when I was art professor in Pittsburgh, long before she fell into an award winning career as a vintner. She is also a painter and at one time was my student.

This visit has allowed me to see the vineyard in its maturity and it is lovely. So many kinds of grapes and wines were seen and sampled. In the evenings after visiting Ohiopyle, the local art sanctuaries or the Frank Lloyd Wright house we return in the evening. Blog2.1I cook, she pours and expounds on the botanical infusion process that has produced some of her finest award winning wines. Of course, I’m in heaven.

Klaytasting

We also stopped by at her son’s distillery, Ridge Runner, across the street, where we created the Silver Bullet Tiny cocktail.

Her lovely sister, Dr. McCarthy, has her own restaurant in a town at the bottom of the mountain with food to die for. become a guiltless gourmet and experience one of the finest farm to table destinations.

Roxy's

 

My tiny house tours and workshops drew an interesting group: builder’s, junior and high school students, tiny house curious empty nesters and environmentalists. All were fascinated with my off-grid building envelope and customized repurposed/reclaimed storage solutions. Hooray, a success.

You know you have an impact when science students can’t wait to take the samples of your building envelope back to their environmental science teachers and parents!

This segment’s lessons were learned the hard way:

  1. When prepping for your tour, and making your tiny house on wheels road worthy, always have it weighed first and your anti-sway bars and brakes calibrated in several driving conditions. Against my trailer company owner’s advice back in 2013, I bought only a 7500lbGW trailer. For only $500. additional, I could have had a 10,000lbGW trailer. Oops! I should have listened to Ross. I weighed in at 9,280 pounds a few weeks before my trip. That cost me $1,300. to change out my axles, tires and brakes for the appropriate 10,000lbGW system. SBWeighed.1And it added 2″ to my height, which is 13’2″ now. Anti-sway bars, if not calibrated correctly, can cause more damage than their original intended purpose. Make sure wherever you purchased your trailer, they help do this for you. For me, I went with the trailer company owner to see just what is involved in a calibration of them and my new braking system.
  2. Take driving lessons with your load or practice beforehand. I white-knuckled it all the way in my first 500 miles of driving of the tiny house. Yikes, just learning how it feels to move from gear to gear, how to navigate those narrow construction lanes with high cement walls, how to quickly collapse your truck mirror when needed, how to brake effectively, etc. was kind of exciting. Knowing you have a 10,000 lb load behind you down a steep mountain is a new experience. When my first large semi-tractortrailer passed me on the left, I could feel the physics of the pull of my vehicle mass towards his. I call it the semi vortex adjustment. When two of them are simultaneously on either side of me I call that the semi-sandwich vortex adjustment. It feels similar to the feeling you get when an elevator drops ten floors too fast.
  3. Learn to drive forward only until you know how to back up with your tiny house. After my first day of driving I was physically exhausted. My hands and arms and right foot ached. It takes awhile to learn how, when and in what conditions and gears give you the safest, most comfortable and angst-free ride. That first night, I saw a gigantic truck stop with 165 spots to park and a path forward to exit. As one of the nation’s largest truck stops, which is an education in our country’s commerce, I pulled in next to militia shipments, stacked armored vehicles, loads of bicycles, food, building materials, you name it! The management gave me a free shower because I was the first ‘tiny house’ they had ever seen. Or maybe the stench of nervous driving was just a bit too much for them! LOL. I had a few hours of drinking my favorite wine outside on the chair and watched the experts ‘backing in’ to their spot from every conceivable beginning position. I learned a lot! Truckers loved my tiny, and they showed me some of their incredibly elaborate cab living spaces. I had some great conversations with trucker couples and drivers – real salt of the earth folks. Too scared to get stuck backing up, I made sure every place I went I saw the path forward to get out before I entered.
  4. Be diligent about checking bridge and underpass heights; yes, even on interstates. On the Pennsylvania Turnpike there are several old tunnels, bridges and overpasses. They are pretty good about giving you notice about 50 yards in advance. Other times, it is just a 6″x 10″ sign on the bridge. Be prepared to move over into the middle lane every time you see an arched bridge or tunnel. Getting off the interstate to get gas or food can also be tricky. Heights and the space to turn should be something you assess before turning in.
  5. Do not risk driving your precious load in bad weather. I had forgotten how dangerous the mountain road was up to the winery at Chalk Hill. I started up the mountain with no rain, then it began pouring. I could see each turn-off area was occupied by several trucks with no place for me to stop. The last third up to Summit Hill was in dense fog. With no place to turn off and traffic behind me, I white knuckled my way to the top. I DO NOT recommend driving your tiny house in this kind of weather, especially up a dangerous mountain. I’ve been up and down the mountain many times since then. On this mountain it is illegal to go down the mountain going anymore than 10 miles an hour. And that is enforced daily. Oh yeah, I’ll make sure its dry and sunny out when I leave!
  6. Take the time to rest, get out and enjoy the nature and unique places near you along the way. If you know my life story, you know I have had several close calls with death, Life is short, don’t forget to smell the roses, hike the mountains, share lovingly prepared meals with friends, dance and drink great wines.
  7. Being compassionate to others and caring for yourself is not an oxymoron. Giving that extra moment at the end of the day after hordes of tourists see your tiny to a curious wide-eyed child who has so many questions. Inviting a less fortunate ‘tiny house curious’ stranger to share a meal and their story with you inside your tiny. And also remembering to take time for yourself while you serve, educate and empower the public about your tiny house journey and the movement. For me, that means meditating or practicing yoga at sunrise or sunset. Or sharing wine and food with tiny house friends at a long table in the farm fields. Perhaps sketching and letting my imagination run free or just curling up with a good book listening to the rain on steel.

I look forward to every day of this adventure: the experiences, lessons, insights and people that await me on this journey will be one I will never forget!

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*I have always followed my dreams. I have been lucky to have had 3 successful stints in very different right and left hemisphere careers. I’m living my fourth intentional lifestyle design and am having the fun, joy and rewarding experience of facilitating and empowering others to do the same.

I have given sustainable lifestyle design classes and workshops, hands-on tiny house workshops, tiny house journey seminars, facilitated and helped other tiny house leaders in their workshops, spoken locally, regionally and nationally for over four years, and I love it!