Anthropologists believe our ancient human ancestors spent their time in trees, so it should be no surprise we love treehouses today.When an acre-size slice of land in Gold Hill, Colorado, came on the market earlier this year, local resident Jessica Brookhart, 41, snapped it up for $80,000.It was a place she could hang out with her husband and two young boys.
Unlike the rickety treehouses of yore, many of these new ones have been upgraded. Most are still accessed with a ladder, however, requiring you to climb. “It was traumatic, I was stunned,” Nanci, 45, said. “But we were also so saturated with despair at that point. Nobody cried.” “In COVID times, I saw a spike in requests for backyard treehouses just because everyone was at home and the kids needed to get out of the house too,” Smith said.
My favorite place I lived was a big long studio loft on damen/armitage in Chicago, it had windows all around and trees, I called it my tree house, the rickety wooden front porch/deck was pretty scary tho!
Did a treehouse write this? 🤔🌳🏡🤷🏼♂️
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Nuh uh I've seen Hereditary