Showing posts sorted by relevance for query pigeon. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query pigeon. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

From pigeon loft to garden office

Bryan Lowe in Seattle, Washington, is a shedworker with a difference as he explains below:
My shed started life as a pigeon loft, a place to hold my two dozen or so homing pigeons. I love birds, but don't like caging them up. Having homing pigeons seemed the perfect solution, as you can let them go every day, and they return because they want to! Sadly, a creature of some sort got in and killed them all, so it sat, used only as a tool shed, for a couple of years.

But now my fancy turns to writing, and the loft has become a perfect place to write without distraction. Soon the bare walls, once suitable for pigeons but rather drab for writing, will be replaced by wainscoting, drywall, and paint. At this point I write my two websites there, MachNoneFlying.com and Shantyboatliving.com. Soon I hope to write a book on the shantyboat lifestyle and the loft will be the perfect place!

The loft/shed iis 6 feet deep and 9 feet long, small as both a pigeon loft and as a writers shed, but it will do the job. I envision a cozy place, perhaps even with a small boaters gas "fireplace". It sits in my small backyard on the outskirts of Seattle, certainly one of the smallest lots on my street. A cozy shed in a rather cozy yard.


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Monday, November 26, 2007

Sheds, business rates and birds

A terrible story by Gary Cleland in today's Daily Telegraph about the problems of sheds and business rates. Essentially, pigeon fanciers have been told they will have to pay business rates because their pastime is not a recognised sport. Here's what Cleland says:
"Pigeon fanciers will be forced to pay rates on the shed where they store their race baskets, because the fact that they are not officially recognised as a sports club means do not qualify for business rate relief. Sports club can formally apply for dispensation of 80 per cent from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and then to their local authority for 20 per cent. A spokesman for HMRC said that pigeon racing was not listed as one of the sports eligible for business rates relief under the Community Amateur Sports Club scheme."
Bonkers.

Monday, June 04, 2007

Telework Association petitions the PM

The folk at the TA are hoping for more luck than we had with our petition for National Shed Week and are asking for backing for their new petition in favour of flexible working which you can sign up to here. This is what they say: "All the research and case studies (including government initiatives) over the last two decades indicate that flexible working provides significant business benefits to organisations as well as a better quality of life for individuals. It could also be a more effective and popular way of reducing congestion and pollution than road pricing.

"There is no ‘one size fits all’ that could be implemented by government targets or legislation, but there is plenty that government could do to educate and inform, to support and encourage, and to publicise and promote flexible working so that individuals, organisations and UK plc can reap the benefits. This is why we have just started our e-Petition.

"It is not about being for or against road pricing, it is about being FOR changing the way we work so that everyone benefits and so does our environment. Individually employees are for it, unions are for it, even ministers are for it, but somehow getting widespread acceptance into organisational cultures is proving elusive, perhaps because the government, misguidedly perhaps, insists on pigeon-holing it as being about employee rights and carers rather than about the wider benefits."

Sunday, February 03, 2019

Garden office with green sedum roof


Here's an attractive Garden Affairs build in the centre of Bath, Somerset. It's a Linea garden office measuring 4.5m x 2m, with larch wood exterior horizontal cladding finished with a Light Oak stain and doors and windows in a very pleasing Pigeon Blue. It also has a green sedum roof - everybody was doing cartwheels about these when we first started Shedworking more than a decade ago and it's good to see that they've become a very popular feature of many garden office builds 10 years later.

 

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Sunday, October 24, 2010

Pigeonnierworking

We've talked about converting pigeon lofts into workable shed spaces previously on Shedworking and here's a rather delightful example from Apartment Therapy of a remodelled 18th century example in Louisiana.
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Tuesday, February 05, 2019

Garden office nature

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Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Pigeonniers

One attraction of buying an old property in rural France is that you usually get space to spare, writes Shedworking's French correspondent Nick Inman. You don’t need to think of buying or building a shed in the garden when you have convertible outbuildings in your grounds to spare. You may get a barn or two included in the purchase price, or a chicken coop or pig sty; but if you’re lucky your house will come with a pigeonnier, a quaint free-standing dovecote ripe for office development.

There are pigeonniers all over France but they are concentrated in the southwest. In the north (and in Britain) where a cold climate meant winter food was often in short supply, keeping pigeons was a feudal privilege and a dovecot an ostentatious sign of privilege. In the poorer, warmer south where the human population was thinly spread any smallholder could drill a few large holes in a wall to let the birds in to roost. In times before cars and supermarkets, life in the country meant self-sufficiency or starvation. Pigeons were easy to keep: they bred quickly, producing an endless supply of eggs and meat for the table and droppings which could be used as fertilizer for the fields and vineyards.

From the 16th century on, landowners with surplus cash delighted in commissioning round or square towers with elegantly pointed roofs a short way from the house, perhaps stranded in a field of sunflowers. These were still functional structures but they had now become follies.Now that farming is mechanised, fertilizer comes in sacks marked up with health warnings and life in the countryside more bourgeois-bucolic than a slog, property owners are putting their pigeonniers to new uses. Even though they were built for birds, most pigeonniers are large enough to make a decent-sized room out of. They usually stand on stilts capped with mushroom shaped stones to protect the pigeons from rodent predators and a flight or steps or a ladder is needed to get inside but that only adds to the sense or intimacy. What they don’t have are windows and you have to be ingenious to get around this limitation if you want to keep the harmony of the architecture.

But with the aid of a grant for the preservation of a local rural building, there’s not much else to stop you turning the cute little stone or half-timbered tower in your grounds into a home office. Just remember to block up the access holes in the roof or you’ll be forever cleaning pigeon muck off your keyboard.

A version of this article appears in the latest issue of The Shed magazine.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Beach Hut Tuesday - Eyes Wide sHut

The Bathing Beauties festival-extravaganza-competition last year was a marvellous showcase for new beach hut designs. Above is one of the most intriguing, and one of the winners, Eyes Wide sHut from Feix&Merlin (photo by Michael Trainor). Those interested in the above and other Bathing Beauty designs will be interested to hear that there is a possibility of commissioning full scale designs from the Bathing Beauty web site. For more details email questions@bathingbeauties.org.uk
Thanks to Lesa Dryburgh from Stop The Pigeon for the photos