To an outsider, the dilapidated farmhouse looks cold, uninviting. But, to Patricia Kent, 29, and her fiance, Dillon Haggerty, also 29, it’s the literal framework for a dream home where they envision sitting around a dinner table, eating food they grow themselves on the property’s 7 acres.
After their rental home burned down about 1 1/2 years ago, the couple found their “diamond in the rough, rough, rough,” as they call it, setting in place an ambitious plan for permaculture, building and living off the land. They recently moved into a travel trailer on the property in east Clark County, where they’re living with their two young kids while they toil away at improving a house originally built in 1949.
The dream — and the fury to see it through — was sparked on the afternoon of Sept. 7, 2012, when they lost everything.
Attic fire
For two years, Patricia and Dillon lived in a rental home on about a quarter acre in Vancouver’s North Image neighborhood. They had no plans to leave and were growing produce on the property that they sold to New Seasons through their business, Delish Farms. They had recently planted their fall crops. In the bedroom, Patricia gave birth to their son Quintin, who’s now 2 years old.