THE PARTHENON OF ROOT CELLARS
How to build and install a proper root cellar, including digging the hole, support beams, diagrams, photographs, and instructions.
by MIKE WELLS
ILLUSTRATION BY JOE STEUBEN
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Our five-year search was over. We had found our home in the
country: Sky Meadow, one hundred sixty acres of pasture,
pines, junipers, bubbling springs and a panoramic 60-mile
view of valley, mountain, sky and weather. It was nine
months later before we took up residence in
what—barring a subdivision and shopping center on the
next section—will be our final move.
We arrived, grossly overloaded, on June 1, after three days
of "unusually heavy" rains. The mile and a half of rutted
tracks from the country road had turned into an impassable
morass of adobe muck. A neighbor rancher down in the valley
led us 12 miles through the forest on graveled logging
roads to a spot only a quarter of a mile from the cabin. We
packed in essentials and made camp, awaiting the drying of
the roads.
While we waited out the three days of sunny, dry weather
before the roads became passable, we explored our domain
and planned our summer. The garden would go down there on
that flat next to the orchard. We'd develop the spring
uphill from the cabin first, and then the other two . . .
one for the garden and the other for the duck pond. One
benefit of the cabin siding being off was that it would be
easy to insulate and wire. We could get the poles for the
deer fence over in that big stand of junipers on the east
forty. I had to do something about that log shed before it
collapsed. And that fallen-in root cellar . . . .
Where did the time go? Suddenly we were well into our
second summer and Joanie kept complaining that if the root
cellar wasn't completed soon we could split the turnips,
rutabagas and kohlrabi and use them for cordwood. And I'd
horse another 125-pound railroad tie into position and
exclaim, "Only five more courses to go . . . then comes the
roof!"
The 8' X 12' hole at the brow of the hill had, in fact,
been started over a year before. Willing summer visitors
had wielded shovel, bar and pick with fervor and
vigor—for a few minutes—and then had suddenly
become more interested in the beer in the spring box or the
view or just conversation . . . the least of our needs
during summer working weather.
Desultory stabs were made at "the hole" after the spring
thaw but seemed to deepen it little. Other priorities
beckoned: tilling, planting the garden, getting in next
winter's wood (ideally done the prior spring), repairing
winter damage to the road, clearing the last mile of the
REA pole line, improving the big spring, digging 21
eight-foot-deep pole holes for the electricity and a few
other miscellanea.
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