My Sheddie : Steve Knight Colne Valley Postal History Museum

Sheddies name

Steve Knight

Shed name

Colne Valley Postal History Museum

Selfbuild or off the shelf shed?

8 x 8 ft Off the shelf from Anglian Sheds at Marks Tey – very reasonable. Had to be brought in over the neighbour’s wall in sections and then put together. Fully insulated and lined out with ply, carpeted with full power and telecoms links (as you’d expect from a Post Office!).

Why have you got a shed? uses etc

The Postal collection started life in an old outside loo, bur soon out grew that, necissitating the purchase of a shed. With the collection still a growing, a second shed is now in prospect!

How would you describe your shed?

“Striving to be a real Museum even though it’s hidden awayt in a suburban garden in Essex. One day the shed (or sheds) will fly to a new location where more people can see them.

Until then it’s my own oasis of tranquility, full of things that need fixing, where I can sit and ponder the workings of the detent escapement mechanism in a 1930′s stamp vending machine and wonder in awe at how any society of whatever complexity could produce something so intricate, so manifestly well designed, functional, ergonomic and with an econnomy of embellishements, just to sell you a stamp at the wayside….”

Future Shed plans

Either add another shed of a similar size (56sq ft) or buy the land at the bottom of the garden and put in a 40ft x 10ft monster shed!

What word would you use to sum up Sheds

In the absence of Castles, Sheds will do for most Englishmen.
(Wilco note or Welshmen ;) )

My sheddie – Reg and the Lady Sarah

Of course I could not do a My sheddie Q & A without this years shed of the year winner Reg.

Sheddies name

Reg Miller

Shed of the year

Shed name

THE LADY SARAH OUT OF WORTHING

Selfbuild or off the shelf shed?

Selfbuild

Why have you got a shed? uses etc

To store & display a large amount of PIRATE ephemera and other assorted weird stuff I had accumulated over a number of years………AND FOR THE HELL OF IT…

How would you describe your shed?

A shed / summer house loosely built to look like the deck of a Pirate ship using panel doors across the front to look like the Oak facade of the captain’s cabin..The doors all open to turn it into a summer house for parties etc…..A place to suspend reality..

Who are your shed inspirations?

The Disney film PIRATES of the CARRIBEAN……The voodoo womans cabin crossed with the CAPTAINS CABIN…

Future Shed plans

To keep adding MORE FUN

How did you find out about our community?

By word of mouth from a friend….

What word would you use to sum up Sheds

Escapism

My sheddie – @Documentally The Plotting Shed

I thought I would start up the Q&A for my sheddies again after ShedWeek.

So the first one is sheddie Documentally (Christian Payne ) who in his own words is a

“Social technologist. mobile media maker. vlogger. photographer. gun for hire. talking, teaching, documenting. ask me for a quote.”

And now he can add sheddie to that list!

I followed Christian on twitter a while back as he did some things with Bletchley Park and when he tweeted that he was getting a shed I pounced, and he got round to sharing his shed and then doing this Q & A.

The Plotting Shed owned by Documentally

Me in Scottevest fleece

Selfbuild or off the shelf shed?

It’s off the shelf with a few custom tweaks.

It was a birthday present for my Wife. I am not a keen gardener but I am a keen tinkerer. There will be modifications done to the shed before long.. Some including solar and a comms set up etc.

Why have you got a shed?

“It’s really for Garden storage.. hence the original name was going to be.. ‘Egarots Nedrag’

But sheds always start out with innocent intentions and then more sinister uses move in.


How would you describe your shed?

It looks normal on the outside but then so does the Tardis.”

Who are your shed inspirations?

Anyone who has taken the time to create the sacred space at the bottom of their garden.

Future Shed plans

More solar power, intercom, still.. and some secret stuff.

How did you find out about our community?

Twitter

What word would you use to sum up Sheds

Sanctuary

if you would like to be featured in this irregular spot then contact me.

Tooth and Claw a sheddies tale

Sheddie Shedonist has emailed me this great little piece about becoming a sheddie after his retirement.

shedonister

After yonks of retirement and planning to move my indoor study away from the in-house hullabaloo, I recently completed the insulation and computer wiring of my garden’s 8x8ft corner of paradise and moved in. That William Wallace knew a thing or two… ‘Freedom!’

My shed sits by the garden wall, not twelve paces from the kitchen door. Time it right and I can get there unseen, make a two-pint jug of tea and be back ‘in stir’ like a thief in the night.

Through one window of my new home, I can see the sweet Severn rivering its course to the sea. Digitally remastered copies of old movies like Brief Encounter, A Matter of Life and Death and Went The Day Well? can be dusted off and re-run. Philosophic rants and rambles and Letters To The Editor can be quietly composed; single issue campaigns designed to annoy the local council can be conceived – all of these not necessarily to be read or carried out by anyone but me. To paraphrase (or parody?) Rupert Brooke, it could even be ‘some corner shed in a foreign field,’ perhaps a space to think, where ‘this heart, all evil shed away…’ could ‘pulse in the eternal mind…’ Who knows? Inky sketches, That Novel What I Never Wrote, flowery poetry… Splendour, Splendour, Everywhere….

After the house’s constantly clattering door-knocker, the twittering of Radio 2 and persistent hell’s-bells of phone calls, I thought The Shed might prove to be a cell of contemplation, a library/office/study/bothy where long-unread books could be pored over in luxurious silence to a bucolic backdrop of grass growing, buds budding and furry, feathery creatures doing whatever they do do.

Not on your noisome Nelly.

Shedonists, beware! Nobody warns you, after you have decided to jump residence for the great outdoors, of just how bloody noisy – AND bloody AND noisy – it is out there in your garden.

Nature outside those safe, brick-built cavity walls of home is no place for children, small household animals, genteel folk or anyone of a sensitive nature, .

I hadn’t been in my new wooden-clad nest for more than 10 minutes before I watched, in horror, as a squirrel which had been entertaining us through the snowy weeks of winter, playfully pinching bird nuts from the table outside our living room window, had its head ripped off by a buzzard.

I was still in a state of shock when two young cock Robins drew blood, a neighbour’s cat pawed our favourite blackbird to death and a squadron of Wood Pigeon Lancasters used the shed roof as a landing strip before marching around for ten minutes in hobnails. How much DO those things weigh? Plus, a family of magpies ganged up like yelling yobs on the small birds we encourage and a thrush is beating seven slimy bells out of a snail shell on the tiles outside. Every morning, on my short hike to Paradise, there seems to be a new cadaver on the lawn, half-eaten by the animal equivalent of Freddy Krueger. Funnily enough, there’s an Elm Street not far away…

Inside the cavity-walled house, you’re cushioned from all that mayhem outside. In the haven I now call home, every howl and screech seems to echo like a fart in church. At night, it’s even worse. Magnified by the darkness, your imagination converts every cackle, wail and painful mewk into murder most foul, red in tooth and claw. Just the other midnight, I was draining the dregs of a rough Rioja and idling through Gordon Thorburn’s Men And Sheds when sinister scratching began at the base of my hovel and began to play around the outside wall.

Mouse? Mole? Rat? Mink? Badger? Freddy? Nervously, I looked out with a torch – as a thorn branch ran up and down the wall in a light breeze. I’ve never been a nervy person, but suddenly my outstanding example of effortless garden cool in the post-industrial semi-rural environment is taking on the mantle of Sleepy Hollow.

Previously, I’d thought the odd overnighter in the shed might be a way of recapturing youthful memories of good times camping (under canvas!) when adulthood was a long march away and night demons had still to visit. A Primus Stove perhaps, or a reason to use the rusty barbecue for bacon and eggs at dawn. Ha!

Today, I went out and bought a burglar alarm and a strong indoor padlock.

And could you recommend any good sound-proofing?

Yours nervously.
Shedonist

What you doing in your shed for St David’s Day?

I put a request on twitter the other week, and did not get much response so I emailed some Welsh sheddies and did not get much response either :( but the ones who did were great.

Sheddies Ian from Ian’s Shed
ian shed

Well, St. Davids Day being a Monday I will be pottering in my work
shed at the Aberystwyth University. Thanks to grants from various august
bodies, I have been able to evolve a nicely equipped shed and to hide in it
between coffee and beer breaks.

Probably Saturday will be spent trying to find the fault on the central
locking on my 1952 Fordson Major. Sunday morning will be The St. Davids Day
Service at Chapel of course, followed by Cawl and cheese and a nice relaxing
afternoon sorting my collection of 7/16 Whitworth bolts before watching
Antiques Roadshow.

Lee from The Red Dragon (chataux delux) did not say anything just sent me some photos from Last St David’s Day.

So Welsh Sheddies let me know what you get up to.