Sunday 6 January 2013

A Shed is for Life, not just for Christmas

Over the years, for many men, sheds have been an important part of their life. In fact, most wives would probably wish a shed for their shedless men, just to stop them from getting under their feet for a few hours. And what better place to while away the time, pottering, tinkering, thinking, making, inventing, reading, writing.

This list of things to do in a shed is limitless and there is now a full industry alive and kicking based around shed. I have been known to be an admirer of sheds and back in the days on the beat, I could often be found on my beat huddled inside a shed on the allotments drinking mint tea with fellow sheddies. Naturally, when on duty i would be conducting crime prevention surveys and offering advice (if the Sgt caught me) but there is no better place on earth than a shed.

A few yrs ago, I discovered a website called www.readersheds.co.uk A place for fellow shedman to go and discover their true sheddyness (made up word).

The webmaster started what has become a coveted prize in the form of shed of the year. Well, me being me, I have entered the shed of the year and came 3rd in the Unique category a few yrs ago. Then I built the Solar Shed and entered that. Well blow me down, last yr Solar Shed hit the National Press as it won the Eco Shed of the Yr category and shortlisted as a finalist on the overall competition. The following passage is a direct copy of what is written on my shed entry page on readersheds.co.uk website.

I've attached some web links and the bottom to the local newspaper articles from the competition.

Enjoy.

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The Solar Shed came up as an idea from a customer of mine who did not want to place her Solar Panels on the roof of her very old cottage. So we built her a bespoke garden structure for the job. I told the Mrs about this and she suggested we do the same, as our Solar Panels were facing East on my other Shed, Compost Lodge. So over the winter we started and came up with SOLAR SHED. An all in one eco center for a green lifestyle. 8 x 250w solar panels on the roof, correct angle, perfect south(ish)

Underneath and inside we set about designing it to meet our needs. We have a log making area where I can make fuel from recycled paper and wood shavings, a log store for the burners in the house. We have attached several thousand liters worth of water storage and have fitted the butts with pumps so we don't have to carry watering cans around the allotment. It also houses the drainage rods and sand bags that are always at hand for the little emergencies in life. The Solar Shed has been fitted with several PIR activated solar lights so it lights up at night. Solar Shed is adjacent to Compost Lodge, my main shed which now acts as a small renewable energy workshop so my customers can come and try b4 they buy.


Additional Info: The following was written last year and published on Uncle's Readersshed blog. Thought I would copy and paste as it explains everything.


Within minutes of arriving at the house back in 2004, we knew that this was the place for life. Three generations, all under the same roof with enough space to grow our own food and start a new life on the banks of the River Great Ouse in Norfolk.

The River is Tidal with a massive range and the house nestles into the River Bank as it has done for over 500 yrs. It was once home to the village fishing industry and has a slipway in the garden. Lurking at the bottom of the garden is a small collection of ramshackle outbuildings, greenhouses and sheds.

As soon as we were settled I took ownership of the Shed and due to the size and fact there is a massive greenhouse only accessible from the shed, I renamed it Compost Lodge and this particular Shedman came to life.

Up until moving from London, I had been no more than an aspiring Shedman with my unusual assortment of small sheds. One was down the allotment in Sydenham, South London where I lived whilst a serving Police Officer in London and the other was at the house. That was, in its own right, a small shed marvel as it was a roofed space rather than a shed.

My old house was a new-build and it was L shaped as it was built around an electricity sub-station. The shed was L Shaped and about 20ft long and 4 ft wide narrowing to a point where the house and sub- station met! Shed nights in those days consisted of me and couple of mates who would filter in and stand side by side as there was no room to huddle as man in sheds do.


Compost Lodge, however, is an altogether different type of Shed. More a social shed . So when I discovered Readerssheds.co.uk, I was one of the first to put some pics up for others to see and share their dreams of solitary isolation at the bottom of the garden.




I was dumbfounded when back in 2005 I was contacted via email by a bloke who claimed he was making a short Inside-Out regional prog about men in sheds and wanted to come over and film Compost Lodge on a shed night. I thought It was a wind up by a mate from work but went along with his request and that Friday the Fenland Shed Society were joined by the BBC film crew who I am confident have never had such a surreal assignment!




Time has passed, and the shed has evolved and become home to Village events and live music sessions. The term Shedaoke was first coined in Compost Lodge for my 40th Birthday celebrations where we had a Karaoke party in the shed!




Shed nights are good for the soul, and it was about 4 yrs ago during a shed night that i drunkenly suggested i would try and make the shed as self sufficient as possible. So i started by harvesting rainwater and now have over 1000 litres of fresh rainwater for the greenhouses and other water features. Outside the shed is the garden kitchen which comprises of a big barrel BBQ and cooking area.

There is a small solar shower hanging up outside Compost Lodge so we can wash and brush up whilst cooking or to wash hands after getting the coal for the fire! Last year, I had 100 yrds of black hose pipe coiled up, over the roof of the sheds, which was solar pumped with water from the kids pool. This kept the water warm enough to use at our leisure for about 6 months last year. And then, at last in July this year, i finally saved up enough money to purchase 2kw of Solar PV. This is the electricity generating solar rather than the heat generating solar. I already have those panels on the house and they provide all our hot water so when the UK Government introduced the feed in tariffs last year, i just had to get my electric panels up.

The shed roof faces North East and as you are only allowed one feed in tariff per electric metre I opted for the shed as although the house has a perfect south facing roof, i am leaving the domestic electric meter to feed back into the grid any surplice i generate from a tidal barrage i am designing. (I own about 50 metres of tidal River Great Ouse)

So Compost Lodge has become Solar Shed. There it sits generating about 5 kws a day (a decent positioned 2kw system will average 6-7 a day over a whole year) The shed is home to 5 freezers and fridges where we store the food we grow for the winter and spring.

The shed uses more background electricity than the house so we get free electricity during the day. I have the freezers on timers so they go off for a few hours overnight so i don t use any power when I am not generating it!

The money I receive from the Feed in Tariff pays for ALL my electricity in the house so I am in effect without bills for the rest of my life with regards to electricity! As I am in the Solar Trade, i have now set up shop at home so customers can come and visit and see the power of the sun before they actually buy the systems and as the shed is open beamed, they can see the fittings and wiring and all that goes with it. So after only 7 yrs, the Shed has become a focal part of our life. It is a hobby room, an office, a chill-out bolt hole and a place for rather unusual parties. It is also doing more than its fair share for the environment and the community.

To date the shed has been home to about 5-6 charity events where over £3,000:00 has been raised for McMillan, Help for Heroes, The Blue and Gold Trust, The Village Hall and other good causes. It has featured in the local paper, regional TV and is a talking point in the Village.

Last year it also came 3rd the Unique sheds category in Shed of the Year competition. Now that the panels have gone up, Solar Shed will be entered into Eco Shed next year and if there is any justice in the world Sarah Beeny will visit me with the winners award next year!

(update, Solar Shed won Eco Shed of the year 2012)


Some shedpress

Some more shedpress


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