It wasn’t an easy confession, partly because Shweta loved the energy and the activity of living in the city.
“If the city girl really wanted to stay in the city, I was never going to force a move,” Nate says. “But to me, living out in the country and then going to the city for the culture and social activities — that’s the ideal way to live.”
Shweta was willing to give it a try, so they went out to the acreage to look at the house. “It was far worse than I remembered,” says Shweta. “I came home and I cried.”
Built in the late 1930s, the homestead was initially a single room that housed a family of five. Nate’s father built an addition in the 1990s, which became the kitchen. Still, the house lacked the hominess Shweta wanted.
“It felt like it was just a shelter, a home that was lived in, but it wasn’t really loved in,” she says.
It was also 45 minutes outside the city. Shweta was afraid no one would visit them, that they’d be isolated. Back in their loft, the Hannemans usually spent a lot of time with friends and neighbours.
To test the waters, they transitioned slowly, spending time out in the homestead and time back in the loft. To their amazement, the community they needed started coming to them, thanks in part to Elk Island Retreat, the family business. Nate and Shweta had started to help his parents with it.
The couple rented out their loft and moved to the homestead. Now they had to make it their own. They stayed in Nate’s parents’ basement while they turned the homestead into their dream home. Luckily, they’d already spent a lot of time thinking about what it could look like.
The result? It’s bright and airy, decorated with a natural palette of earthy browns, from cabinets and stone countertops, and greens, from plentiful houseplants. There’s texture everywhere, from the rattan chandeliers in the kitchen to the piles of cushions on the leather sofa in the living room to the gossamer draperies in the bedroom.
Nate and Shweta also own and operate Of Mountains and Mangoes, an online shop that sells handcrafted goods from artisans around the world. The goal, they tell me, is to support people they meet on their travels who make specialty goods, while bringing those products to Alberta. “When products are made with generational love and skill, something just shifts spiritually,” says Shweta. “You can’t always explain it but you certainly feel it.”