I decided to spend last night in the Sunspot to test out the 'cot/daybed' sleeping method (needs work) and test/pack things like the water, stove, kitchen box, etc. It's parked along the treeline in the back field at the house my sister shares with her significant other, so it was shady, faced the sunset and offered a great view of last night's start of the Perseid meteor showers (well, this morning's start...they view best about 4 a.m.!)
Anyhow, this was my basic setup (with food box and chair stowed in the truck on the other side of the treeline:
I found some farmhouse-style shelving units at Marshall's that I liked so much I almost broke a cardinal rule and paid the full Marshall's price for them. I'm going to try to hold out until they mark them down.
Here's a detail of the cot setup--the cot was too slippery on the linoleum floor, even with a sleeping pad under the legs. I think I'm going to go check out feather beds, and investigate some other sleeping options. The curtains were a splurge...JC Penney's has this style of bedding as quilt, shams, sheets, curtains and valances which are bleached muslin with a sage green/yellow/peach nine patch pieced border that keeps them light enough to move in the breeze. The valances were 80" long, so I could buy two--split one for the two smaller windows and use the other along my 50" wide front window. I just have to find another hanging solution besides the cheap cafe curtain rod holders, which stick out and are sharp if you bump into them. I'm thinking rounded wooden drawer pulls might be wide enough to secure the brass curtain rod, without being a puncture hazard to people who move quickly.
I want to finish the interior walls with something easier to keep clean than just the bare wood, so it's off to the paint store to look at stains. I really like the color and grain of the cedar and want to seal it more than add color. Time to pick the brains of the paint people at Lowes and HD.