Monday, June 27, 2016

I love this photo

Look at the size of those logs!
Another neat thing about this one is the logs on the gables.
Many times, especially if the cabin had been moved, the gable ends would just have been framed.
It is rear to find log gable end cabins still surviving. If you see one, take lots of pictures.
One of the women looks like she could be smiling, the other just looks tired.
It had to have been a hard life.

Flagstone chimney.

You can still see the roof is supported by horizontal logs not rafters. Another sign of a log gabled roof.

An addition to the 'Twigger' post. . .

I have found a few more pictures to go with the vacation cabin we used in the 60's that I talk about in the 'Twigger' post.

These are of my brother and I and my mom at the cabins.

























The card that started this search again.
This one is a repeat from the earlier post but should be included here.

Monday, June 13, 2016

Log Cabins at Camp Irondale, Mo.


Here with the St Louis Zoo's Merlin Perkins.










And a log Adironcack shelter

A friend of mine use to call these 'Twiggers' - log cabin motels

When routes like the famous Rt 66 started transporting vacationers further away from home, small log cabin motels started to spring up.
Fairly inexpensive to put up and maintain they offered a rustic retreat for families on the road.

Some of my earliest vacation memories (which I have written about in earlier posts) were spent in a log cabin at the Lake of the Ozarks.

This weekend while driving to a birthday party for daughter in one of the busier sections of our fair town I came across the following log structures.

 While I don't know the history of these particular buildings, the style and the fact that a number appears on one of the doors would suggest at one time it was a road side motel/cottage.

A number 3 is on the front door of this one.
 These next 3 images are different views of the above cabin.

Usually made of smaller cedar or pine logs, not much effort was put into hewing the logs or making them uniform. You can see that in the wavy chinking.
Small logs were easy to find, easy to move and lift.

Where some of the older hewn logs took about 5 or 6 logs to make one story, these take about 12 or 13.


 This is the second cabin.
 The two shown together.
 This is the cabin at the entrance of the place. The third cabin.
I would suggest it wast the office for the motel complex at one time witht he bigger front window and front porch.

All three are in good shape and well taken care of.















Following are a few more log cabin road side stops.




































And a couple from my childhood vacation area, Osage Beach Mo.




















And the next one is the vacation one we used in the 60's.

Dad on the porch and brother in the chair.





















And here is the post card from the camp.