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LONG-TIME COMING

February 2021

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The Good Life

Peshastin home is a promise fulfilled, and filled with promise

- SUSAN LAGSDIN

LONG-TIME COMING

Tom and Shannon Reichert, her toddler in tow, each moved their accumulated adult-life possessions from two large homes and squeezed into an air-force base basic, 1,074 square-foot ranch in Tucson. That was 18 years ago.

“Someday,” Tom promised his new bride, “I’m going to build our house with a master suite that’s just as big as this whole place.”

And so he did.

Their new house idea grew and changed over the years. What never changed was knowing — from their very first years of dating — where they would build it.

Tom had driven his new girlfriend on a whirlwind tour of the Northwest, centered on his own hometown of Brewster. They crossed through the Methow Valley, touristed in Seattle, headed east over Stevens Pass and dropped into Leavenworth.

Tom remembers Shannon saying then, “This place is so beautiful. I could live here forever.” Being the dutiful boyfriend, he committed that comment to memory.

They knew exactly what they wanted: “a place with ‘understated elegance,’” said Tom.

They bought their Peshastin property in 2011 and had house plans drawn by Copeland Architects of Spokane (guided by a precise 12-page wants-needs proposal by the Reicherts) and then they bided their time, knowing that building the house would take their life savings and plenty of sweat equity.

Shannon taught elementary school, Tom retired from the Air Force after 24 years of service and was piloting commercial airliners.

المزيد من القصص من The Good Life

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