MaryJanesFarm Farmgirl Connection
Join in ... sign up
 
Home | Profile | Register | Active Topics | Members | Search | FAQ
Username:
Password:
Save Password        REGISTER
Forgot your Password?

 All Forums
 General Chat Forum
 A Farm of My Own
 Anyone live in a manufactured home?**Pictures**
 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Previous Page | Next Page
Author A Farm of My Own: Previous Topic Anyone live in a manufactured home?**Pictures** Next Topic
Page: of 5

countrykatgirly
True Blue Farmgirl

186 Posts

Hallie
Jordan NY
USA
186 Posts

Posted - Nov 03 2009 :  10:31:39 AM  Show Profile
I did get that book. He had some good ideas. Our place has those vinyl panels, though, so we are limited in what we can hang on the walls. It's frustrating.

**Farmgirl Sister #622**

“It is the sweet, simple things of life which are the real ones after all.”
--Laura Ingalls Wilder


Go to Top of Page

Cycling Farm Girl
True Blue Farmgirl

86 Posts

Carrie
Alberta
Canada
86 Posts

Posted - Nov 03 2009 :  12:17:25 PM  Show Profile
Hi Ladies! Any bit of land, no matter what is on it is VERY special! Where I live, you can't get an acreage (1 acre) for less than $275,000 and that's with a modular...acreages with a house on it go for about $340,000 and up. So my husband and I live in a townhouse in the city with cranky neighbors while we seek our plot of land outside the city...and wait for pricing to come down. Feel blessed...and where you are, be all there! Saying that though, I decorate my city townhouse as if I was out in the country. G-d has blessed us in many other ways of which I am so grateful!

Here's a few very kewl websites I've dug up:
Country Living...has videos and images and how-to's:
http://www.countryliving.com/search/fast_search?search_term=mobile+home

or modular home resources
http://www.mygreathome.com/indoors/study_corner/small_spaces.htm

http://www.mobilehomedoctor.com/

mobile home fix it forum

All the best! Relish in the challenge!!



Carrie - Victorian Urban Farmgirl

For with the measure you use, it will be measured to you.
Luke 6:38


Go to Top of Page

sbaxter13
Farmgirl in Training

37 Posts

susan
lakeland fl
USA
37 Posts

Posted - Nov 16 2009 :  11:50:37 AM  Show Profile  Send sbaxter13 a Yahoo! Message
i have a moble home and love it. it was given to me , you see i had a nice block home and my morgage payment was 1425.00 a month. my husband had a bad accident and he almost died to make a long story short i lost every thing i had so i love my mobile home my payment is 181.01 . we are remoldeding now. we live on 3 acres and the mobile is paid for . dont be sad i love mine no payments susan

farm girl susan
Go to Top of Page

MyGreenGravity
True Blue Farmgirl

69 Posts

Michelle
OH
USA
69 Posts

Posted - Nov 16 2009 :  12:17:24 PM  Show Profile
Don't you feel bad about your mobile home!! I am doing the same thing and I LOVE my wee little home...

PAID FOR which means NO MORTGAGE which means money is freed-up (is that a word?) to do so many OTHER THINGS!!

See today's post on my blog, and you'll see pictures of the inside of my home...and it is a "work in progess" just like yours...

www.mygreengravity.blogspot.com
Go to Top of Page

jinia
True Blue Farmgirl

152 Posts

jinia
mo
USA
152 Posts

Posted - Nov 18 2009 :  6:56:47 PM  Show Profile
Well, Michelle I just left you the link for this topic thread-guess you didn't need it!LOL
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - Nov 19 2009 :  7:35:05 PM  Show Profile
It's wonderful to see how many others live in manufactured homes also and how happy you all are. We just added a room addition to our home that is 1/3 the total square footage of the home before the addition. My grandmother moved in with us, hence the need for the added space. The whole room addition is a major master suite with outside access via french doors. It's really nice and my grandmother loves it.

Heather, I just saw your post asking about cooling the home, we have very hot summers over 100 here also. We use a swamp cooler. You leave a hose hooked up to it and it will cool your home by 20 degrees from the outside temperature by evaporation and fan in the cooler. I keep the lined drapes pulled on the hot side of the house and it isn't bad on the electric bill when compared to an air conditioner.

Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

countrykatgirly
True Blue Farmgirl

186 Posts

Hallie
Jordan NY
USA
186 Posts

Posted - Nov 20 2009 :  03:33:38 AM  Show Profile
quote:
Originally posted by sbaxter13

i have a moble home and love it. it was given to me , you see i had a nice block home and my morgage payment was 1425.00 a month. my husband had a bad accident and he almost died to make a long story short i lost every thing i had so i love my mobile home my payment is 181.01 . we are remoldeding now. we live on 3 acres and the mobile is paid for . dont be sad i love mine no payments susan

farm girl susan



So did you move it out onto some land, then? I was just wondering because that is what I would like to do at some point in the future...

**Farmgirl Sister #622**

“It is the sweet, simple things of life which are the real ones after all.”
--Laura Ingalls Wilder


Go to Top of Page

Rea231
True Blue Farmgirl

139 Posts



139 Posts

Posted - Feb 16 2010 :  4:31:31 PM  Show Profile
I am so happy to see this topic!!! I bought my 1st home as a piece of junk.... $800 14x70 that had an "expando" living room that was "folded" into the home when we drug it to our property with a tractor! We lived in this for 2 1/2 yrs with two kids and no electricity! My driveway is 933 feet of clay that could not be driven on in the spring or fall! I walked with groceries and laundry with babies in tow. (I remember losing boots in the clay!! I didn't think it funny back then!)I spent the best years of my life that way. I read to my kids as it was getting dark.We went to bed when it was dark and got up with the sun.Both of my boys are in different states and both sucessful.I woul not trade a minute ofn the simple times that I was so ashamed of back then. Thanks so much for the memories. God bless.

And last but not least...I purchased a double wide in 1996 I am still in it today. Who the heck cares who builds your house? We farmgirls know how to make it a home.
The art of teaching is the art of assisting discovery.

Edited by - Rea231 on Feb 16 2010 4:41:53 PM
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - Feb 16 2010 :  9:29:13 PM  Show Profile
Rea231 Thank you for sharing your precious memories with us. It is true that the simple life holds much more precious memories than the hustle-bustle I used to live in the "burbs".

Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

AliciaNak
True Blue Farmgirl

405 Posts

Alicia
Elko Nevada
USA
405 Posts

Posted - Feb 25 2010 :  08:03:39 AM  Show Profile
Mobiles are nothing to be ashamed of! Around here, at least half of the homes in the surrounding area are mobiles, and there's a fair number of em in town too. In my immediate neighborhood there are only 6 or so stick built homes.

We finally completed the purchase of our home from my parents in October. I grew up on this property, and my parents got this triple-wide in 94, or 95. I know all the things that have gone on with this place. And it still has issues!! We need a new roof, all new windows (these aluminum frames suck in the cold air and leak!), a new hot water heater and the list goes on. It's never ending, hahaha. We did paint the interior, most of it anyhow, and we're starting to rip out this yucky carpet and putting in Pergo wood floors. The outside did get painted last year, and that helped perk it up a lot! But all in all, it's HOME. I could drive the road to town in my sleep! I couldn't imagine living anywhere else!

Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.
Go to Top of Page

AliciaNak
True Blue Farmgirl

405 Posts

Alicia
Elko Nevada
USA
405 Posts

Posted - Feb 25 2010 :  09:00:26 AM  Show Profile
Here's the homestead...Complete with laundry on the line :) And the spring green in the yard (last year)




Do not follow where the path may lead. Go instead where there is no path and leave a trail.
Go to Top of Page

Annika
True Blue Farmgirl

5602 Posts

Annika

USA
5602 Posts

Posted - Feb 25 2010 :  09:21:41 AM  Show Profile
I've got to paint mine and do new trim and it should look really spiffy...I love my wee little no payment home =) Even if it is busting at the seams with too much junk! Planning more remodelling too!
I'll get before and after pics once its better weather out. and I'm about to start in on the painting =)

Annika
Farmgirl & sister #13

Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. ~Leonardo DaVinci
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - Feb 25 2010 :  7:45:55 PM  Show Profile
Alicia, what a nice place. I love the clothes line and the wonderful deck. From the slope it looks like our ground.
I definitely love that we don't have any payments on our home (except for taxes which I hate, but I won't go there). Thanks for sharing your picture. Good luck with the remodeling.

Annika, I look forward to seeing your pictures.

Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

schoolmama
True Blue Farmgirl

70 Posts

Amy
WI
USA
70 Posts

Posted - Mar 05 2010 :  9:23:57 PM  Show Profile
I don't live in a mobile home, but just wanted to say hi! Our first home, was a 70's something mobile home, we bought for $1000 . It was in pretty bad shape, but with some used cabinets, counters,and lots of sweat equity , we made it pretty nice looking! we sold it for $5000 and bought a house. With 3 kids and one on the way, our 2 bedroom mobile home was getting very tight. We are glad we had that experience, and since then we've had 4 fixer upper homes. That little mobile home, gave dh enough "practice" with his remodeling skills, that he gained confidence and he has done a wonderful job with our other homes.
A home is made of sticks and stones, but the love inside is what makes a home!
btw- I think you're little red house is just adorable- don't feel bad!
Go to Top of Page

shelia
Farmgirl in Training

19 Posts

Shelia
Soddy Daisy Tennessee
USA
19 Posts

Posted - Apr 23 2010 :  09:10:15 AM  Show Profile
I, too, live in a manufactured home. We bought it new in 1988 and paid it off almost 7 years ago. I am SO THANKFUL that I have the AMERICAN DREAM, my own home. Three years after we bought it my husband almost died with severe heart problems. He was 38 when it happened and couldn't go back to work. It was up to me to make the payment $423.08, which wasn't easy. But, we did it and now we have our own home. It is cozy and comfortable and a safe haven. Sure, we talk about someday having our dream home, a log house, but if it doesn't happen, and it probably won't, that's okay. We are happy with what we have. I'd rather have peace of mind, knowing no one can take it away from me, than worry constantly about making a huge house payment because I think I have to have what other people consider a "real" house. I would much rather have my real HOME.

Just pray for a tough hide and and a tender heart. Ruth Bell Graham
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - Apr 23 2010 :  3:18:49 PM  Show Profile
Sheila, Happy your DH is alright! You are absolutely right....we paid cash for our used home when we bought it, and it's been wonderful not to have a mortgage payment to make. Our rigs are paid off also, but in this economy the way it's gone, it's difficult to just pay the regular monthly bills sometimes. We do what we can and maybe someday we'll get to remodel the rest of the kitchen which really needs it. For now, it is functional and that's okay.......I can't take it with me anyhow.

Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

Elkaye
True Blue Farmgirl

121 Posts

Lisa
Brunswick ME
USA
121 Posts

Posted - Apr 29 2010 :  7:29:45 PM  Show Profile
I also live in a mfg home.... We purchased our place 1 1/2 years ago- it's on a 1/3 acre and the upside was that the lot was allready fenced all the way around- yay! The dog was and is happy and secure. So the color wasnt great and it needed (still) new flooring, but it's our home. Our nest! We have painted the exterior and we love the color. The price of the paint was a great blessing... We found the paint on Craigs list... $15.00 for 5 gallon buckets- in colors that turned out perfect. My husband built a nice little shop,(will finish this summer) I put in a garden last year!!! Found a good sale on rose bushes too... and we have done some interior painting. We are loving it and feel blessed to be here. We also have dreams of living in a log home on more land,,, be we are content where we are right now. After all,,,, home is where the heart is. right?

Seeds of Love rooted in Faith will produce a bounty...
Go to Top of Page

sherrye
True Blue Farmgirl

3775 Posts

sherry
bend in the high desert oregon
USA
3775 Posts

Posted - Apr 30 2010 :  08:25:36 AM  Show Profile
i also live in a single wide mobile. we have redone the inside floor walls windows door etc. its very cute. i love it. since we are packing to move off the land now its hard to let it go. papa has done fine things inside.we are moving into a 40 foot 5th wheel with a slide.i am so happy and proud to have the 5th wheel. my biggest fear leaving was ...where to lay my head safely down at night. have not picked it up yet. owe some $ first on it.i think of it as a canvas to express myself. one way we found was. a wall technique for sheetrock. i use paper bags and make my own white glue. if you are interested i could share the recipe. almost free. all who come here comment on the walls. any hoot. was so glad to see this post. i must say when we moved in and she was red and white and had a red cinder drive and the fence was held up with rocks... i was still overjoyed. my cup was running over. to have land here with a dry place wow.nothing is really as it seems. you can do like the girls here have done. you sound very clever. it really is about how we see a situation. i love challenges.we taught our boys it builds character.love to see the pics.sherrye

the learn as we go silk purse farm
farmgirl #1014
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - Apr 30 2010 :  2:28:25 PM  Show Profile
Sherry, I'd love to know your recipe for the glue. Just this week I saw a room with the bags glued on the wall, it doesn't sound very appealing but it looks really good. I should've taken pictures I could have posted them. If you have any, please share with everyone.
Thanks much,
Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

sherrye
True Blue Farmgirl

3775 Posts

sherry
bend in the high desert oregon
USA
3775 Posts

Posted - Apr 30 2010 :  3:34:04 PM  Show Profile
cindy i will look it up tonight and post it. i used the lunch size bags. i ripped them open and tore off the bottom. i then wadded them up. i ripped the bags random so all different shapes and strips. i open the wadded up bags and dunk in glue. let sit a few seconds till completely covered with room temp glue. i squeeze the excess off and smoosh onto wall. they can overlap some. just make sure the strips and pieces run different directions.i leave lines and and bunches in some spots. once you do a little its easy and kinda meditative. very nontoxic. i practiced first on a chunk of old sheet rock. if you want to do it on paneling. you need to prep first. washing with tsp.o the glue can grab.once dry you can put glazes on it to make it look like rubbed walls or even stone. i think there is a glaze made with cornstarch. nontoxic. once dry you can vacumm to keep it clean. i will post recipe tonight. sherrye

the learn as we go silk purse farm
farmgirl #1014
Go to Top of Page

Bugabee
Farmgirl in Training

33 Posts

Kristie
Lugoff South Carolina
USA
33 Posts

Posted - May 02 2010 :  8:49:53 PM  Show Profile
Just remember this..... a "house" does not make a home. My husband and I made a decision for me to stay at home when our son was born. We wanted to live with in our means. We were newly married and no money to speak of. We looked and looked for a home that was with in our price range and found nothing that wouldn't require a ton of work. We finally settled on a double wide and have never looked back. While our friends were losing their "mini mansions" we were thanking God we were thrifty. These friends were devistated and they felt like their identity was taken from them. I thought it was a shame they couldn't see that they were being offered a chance to get their priorities straight. They have sense gotten themselves back into the same situation because they identify themselves with what they have instead of who they are. I understand what you mean because TV shows the top of the line items and thats what they want us to think is the "norm". I hope I never fit into that "norm". Be proud of your creation! Remodling is an opprotunity to make somethig new from something old! I have a friend who took an old school bus and made it into the coolest house I have ever seen!It would easily impress the toughest critic. When our son goes to college (9 years and counting) we are going to create our dream house out of scraps we find, maybe even a school bus!

The best way to predict your future is to CREATE it.
Go to Top of Page

barefootmama
True Blue Farmgirl

133 Posts

Jennifer
BLOOMSBURG Pennsylvania
USA
133 Posts

Posted - May 03 2010 :  03:15:07 AM  Show Profile  Send barefootmama a Yahoo! Message
I do I do!!!!!! We own a wicked old always needs repair 1973 mobile home!!!!!!that sits on 5 acres we have been here for 5 years. Hubby and I are buying the entire property and the cute little house and garage that sits on it about 200 yards away from our little ugly trailer. I do enjoy our small house with out a house payment weighing us down..I do wish it was a little bigger though, I could use a small space of my own!!!!!It does get drafty in the winter and hot in the summer but ohwell! we put in a woodstove and seal off windows and all is well. I do enjoy working in our home painting here and there,drywalling and such there is always work to be done and this summer we may paint the outside a different color to spice it up...I am a tad eccentric so I am sure a nice bright Farm-all red is in order lol....remember Home is where you make it

Blessed are those who can laugh at themselves,for they shall never cease to be amused:)
Go to Top of Page

missgive
True Blue Farmgirl

127 Posts

Kim
Blairsville Georgia
USA
127 Posts

Posted - May 03 2010 :  04:18:42 AM  Show Profile
Cindy,
When I was in college in Louisiana, I had a couple of different mobile homes and always worked to make them feel snug and homey. My cousin has a small "ranchette" with a dozen head of cattle and she and her now deceased husband had a single-wide on the property. When he passed, she had no debt - owned her acreage and house free and cear. She bought a double-wide about 5 years ago and her son and his family have moved in an out over the years (they are in now). It is a beautiful home and snug and pleasant.

We have a slightly different dilemna. We took my cabin (one bedroom/bath and one greatroom of living room/dining room/kitchen) and starting lst summer, added on, doubling the size. It was an old "hunter's cabin" so not a well-built place to begin with. As we have built, we found walls and floors that were not plumb in the front half of the house, replaced all the windows to make it weather tight, are replacing the siding (the old cedar cracked in many places) and had to rebuild the wood-stove area and hearth. We added on a bedroom in back, a studio for me, a winter pantry and laundry area. We have spent every spare minute and vacation time from our job working on it and hope to have the "big stuff" finished by the end of July. But even after that, there will be a lot of "stuff" that still needs to be taken care of. A lot of "us" ourselves will be in the house - and that makes it home. It is our farm dream in the mountains and the work, though brutal on our old bodies, will be worth it in th end. Know the work and "sweat equity" is worth it....it looks wonderful in your photos. Maybe you should make a scrapbook of the construction and remodel work (before and after, as well as during) to remember your efforts and see the changes. I am going to do that - from beginning to end on our year long project!
Hugs and prayers,
Kim
(PS Plant lots of flowers and bushes around the base....it makes it look like a home.)


Kim (aka missgive)
Proud Farmgirl Sister #927
A Farmgirl Sister headed for my mountain home and farm in 2010.
Go to Top of Page

Mother Hen
True Blue Farmgirl

604 Posts

Cindy
Peck ID
USA
604 Posts

Posted - May 03 2010 :  09:37:01 AM  Show Profile
It's so refreshing to find so many people who are HAPPY with their "free and clear" homes. I DO love that about mine as well. Being a small farmer/rancher there isn't much money at certain times of the year. You really learn to prioritize what you are going to spend it on. Our remodel will take until we are no longer here and then some I'm sure. I have gotten more complacent in my expectations. I do what I can, when we have the money or the time(rarely ever are they at the same time).

**Update** Since I had posted this topic we have added on a room addition that is 1/3 the size of the whole home. This is a large bedroom with sitting area and 10x12 bathroom.......this room addition is where we moved my grandmother (now 90) into. I take care of her and we have sold my MIL's house and garage w/5 acres to my parents and although they live there (300yds away) and can do for themselves I do take them to town to their doctor appointments and grocery shopping and help them do what they just can't anymore.
I am the perpetual caregiver. I just have that "mother hen" personality and like to do for others......well, most all of the time.
I think mostly about fixing up our home when I'm cooped up inside in the winter after all the chores are done.....nights are too long. In the spring, summer, and fall there just isn't enough time to do the work really, we are working outside with the garden, the animals, the haying, etc.


Sherrye-- I'm looking forward to your "recipe" for the glue you used. Can't wait to try this.

Bugabee--I can totally relate to what you said. I have a girlfriend who is experiencing really hard times with all that now. I thank God for my blessings!

Barefootmama--I hear ya on wanting just a little space of your own, I have been asking DH for that so I can put my sewing and craft stuff somewhere and leave it...rather than on the dining room table and off again.

Kim-- I would love to see pictures of your "half-again" house. Sounds like so much fun(and frustration). You must be so PROUD of yourself and what you are accomplishing. I try not to be a prideful person, but you just can't help it when you have tackled something you've never done before and it comes out good......your chest just puffs up on it's own for a while.

I LOVE reading what everyone keeps adding to this topic. I hope more people add their experiences, designs, and please post pictures I'm sure there is more than just me who likes to see the pictures.

God Bless, and keep posting here, this is fun!
Cindy

FARMGIRLS CAN DO ANYTHING!!!
I will bless the Lord at all times: his praise shall continually be in my mouth. Psalms 34:1
Go to Top of Page

sherrye
True Blue Farmgirl

3775 Posts

sherry
bend in the high desert oregon
USA
3775 Posts

Posted - May 03 2010 :  6:52:25 PM  Show Profile
cindy here is the recipe...4 cups non-self rising wheat flour. i use white processed flour...1 cup sugar...1 gallon warm water...1 quart cold water... 1/2 teaspoon oil of cinnamon...
mix flour and sugar in pan. slowly add warm water to make a paste
add rest of warm water to thin and get lumps out
bring to a boil stirring iften
cook till thick and clear
remove from heat and dilute the mixture with cold water to desired consistency
add cinnamon of oil if not used same day.
i make it fairly thick like pudding. i have been known not to use the sugar
i have never used the cinnamon oil
i use it within 24 hours. smooshing the paper on the wall you can modify the look. hope it works for you.
i rip the bottom of the bag off and wad the paper bag up and then open it and soak in glue a few minutes. then i squeeze the excess off and smoosh onto wall. the bumps and lines make it look very natural. i have had it on the wall for 10 years. no a piece came off. my grandmother made this type glue when she was young. i use the recipe for many crafts.
let me know if it works for you. happy crafting sherrye

the learn as we go silk purse farm
farmgirl #1014
Go to Top of Page
Page: of 5 A Farm of My Own: Previous Topic Anyone live in a manufactured home?**Pictures** Next Topic  
Previous Page | Next Page
 New Topic  Reply to Topic
 Printer Friendly
Jump To:
Snitz Forums 2000 Go To Top Of Page