Clicky

ADVERTISEMENT

5 ways to keep cottage maintenance to a minimum so you can relax

Many people who own a cottage will tell you that owning the place — that is, cottage maintenance — is a ton of work. If this is your experience, or if you want to avoid being overwhelmed by a cottage that you plan to build or renovate, you’ve come to the right place.

It’s all too common to see people bite off way too much when it comes to owning a seasonal home. The problem is made worse by the desire to create “natural” looking structures.

The right kind of appearance is vitally important for keeping rural areas looking and feeling right, but it also means you might be pulling out your hair in a few years because of all the maintenance work you’ve created for yourself by going “natural”. This is where low maintenance building strategies can help.

ADVERTISEMENT

#1: Use cedar sidewall shingles

cottage maintenance Steve Maxwell home improvement advice cedar sidewall shingles

Maxwell custom cut the decorative white cedar shingles before working them into the gable end of this home.

This is my favourite wood siding option because it looks so good and lasts so well. You can get more than 50 years of life from sidewall shingles without any maintenance at all.

ADVERTISEMENT

No painting, no staining, no nothing. You get the beauty and natural appearance of wood, without the maintenance trap that most other forms of wood involve.

Sidewall shingles also give you a lot of creative control. You can cut them into shapes and build patterns that look amazing. Eastern white cedar shingles weather to a medium or silver grey. Western red cedar shingles weather to a darker shade. I cut the decorative shingles used in the gable of the small place shown here before installing them in the peak. Here’s a detailed video lesson (about 30 minutes) on using cedar sidewall shingles.

#2: Non-wood decking is great

cottage maintenance Steve Maxwell home improvement advice Trex composite decking

ADVERTISEMENT

This Trex composite decking was retrofitted over an old wooden deck. Synthetic deck lumber relieves a huge amount of maintenance work from cottage properties.

This is a huge issue because maintaining a deck can be a ton of work — work that’ll take you away from the lake and leisure. Too few cottage and camp owners realize what’s required to keep a wood deck looking like more than barn board in a few years.

Finishing and refinishing probably isn’t the reason you got a cottage in the first place, but you’ll spend time staining your deck on your hands and knees if you don’t do something to prevent it.

ADVERTISEMENT

Non-wood decking costs more than standard wood, but you’re buying both material and sidestepping all future costs for finishing and refinishing. And that adds up.

Non-wood decking looks quite good, too, especially the kind with wood grain details embossed in the surface. It also lasts forever since it doesn’t rot. I’ve used plenty of non-wood decking material in my own projects and it’s great.

Here’s some advice on retrofitting an existing wooden deck to use non-wood decking materials. It works for docks and swim rafts, too.

ADVERTISEMENT

#3: Don’t use wood fascia and soffit

cottage maintenance Steve Maxwell home improvement advice aluminum soffit and fascia

This aluminum soffit and fascia is a powerful way to reduce finishing and refinishing from a ladder. Sun and rain are very hard on wood surfaces, so aluminum makes so much sense.

Soffit and fascia refer to the horizontal and vertical surfaces around the edges of a roof, and keeping wood finished properly in these places is insanely difficult. If you don’t go crazy from the trouble of this work, you will go crazy in the body cast they’ll give you after you fall off the ladder.

ADVERTISEMENT

Aluminum fascia (fascia is the vertical stuff) looks great on any building, no matter how natural the siding. Soffit (the horizontal stuff) is often something you can do away with altogether if you frame a roof with rafters.

I use stainless-steel nails to fasten the bottom edge of the fascia, with these nails driven into over-sized, predrilled holes in the metal. This sort of thing is important if you’re installing brown fascia because it picks up more of the sun’s heat. The aluminum expands and contracts a lot with changes in temperature, so the metal needs to be allowed to move with oversized holes or it will buckle and bend. More on installing aluminum soffit and fascia.

#4: Include a covered porch

cottage maintenance Steve Maxwell home improvement advice covered porch

ADVERTISEMENT

Decks are nice, but covered porches like this one are much better. You get all the benefits of a deck plus shelter, shade and longer life for windows and doors.

There are two reasons a covered porch is better than an ordinary open deck, especially at a country place. First, you can enjoy the outdoors more often. Rain or sun, it doesn’t matter. In fact, sitting under the protection of a porch roof when it’s raining is one of the main reasons to own a cottage in the first place. It’s a beautiful and refreshing experience.

And on a practical level, a covered porch keeps windows and doors in good shape by protecting them from the full brunt of the weather. Here are some practical tips on building a covered porch.

ADVERTISEMENT

#5: Keep it small

cottage maintenance Steve Maxwell home improvement advice

Small is beautiful when it comes to cottages and summer homes. Easier to finance and easier to maintain, small places are also more in keeping with the landscape of cottage country.

Building way too big is a common mistake people make when planning a cottage or rural getaway. The whole reason for a country place is to enjoy the countryside, not to be a slave to maintenance and a mortgage.

ADVERTISEMENT

You really don’t need a monster cottage to enjoy beautiful rural spaces. A massive building is especially not what lakeside living is all about. There are already enough too-big houses in the city and suburbs. Small really can be beautiful.

Want to build your own great cabin? My Cozy Cabin building course is a one-of-a-kind learning resource that includes plans, instructions, photos and videos for building your own classic 16×25-foot cabin. Learn more about the course.

Related

More from Steve Maxwell

ADVERTISEMENT

Sign up for our free home maintenance reminder service

Get regular updates on our latest articles

About the Author

Steve Maxwell

Steve Maxwell

Steve Maxwell has been helping Canadians with home improvement, gardening and hands-on living since 1988. Visit BaileyLineRoad.com for videos, stories and inspiration.

ADVERTISEMENTS

THANKS FOR VISITING!

Join our mailing list and GET YOUR FREE Homeowner’s Mini-Guide
Whether searching for your first home, preparing to upsize or downsize, or mulling over a renovation, this guide provides valuable resources and tips.