The loft is very comfortable. We cooked a couple meals in the kitchen, and it worked fine. The loft is connected to the owner's house, but is separate and we felt like we were in our own space. Outside the windows you see basically trees--you can just see the lake a little bit--and what you hear is just wind and maybe birds. But it's a brief walk (less than a minute) down to the beach and dock (part of the property). We launched our kayaks from the beach onto Oseetah Lake, which is lovely and is connected to other lakes, so there's lots of paddling available just from the beach. There are only a couple of houses visible from the dock--mostly, when you look out over the lake, you see water and trees and sky.
The property is in the woods, down a well-packed dirt road, maybe a mile long. We saw a fox and a deer while we were driving on it, and there are interesting views of a marsh that it crosses over.
The owners and hosts, Lem and Anita, were very personable and helpful with suggestions for things to do, and were very generous. They were available for consultation, but not intrusive. The space was very clean.
There is wi-fi available in the loft, and we used it every day, but as the owners told us, it's based on a DSL line, so the Internet bandwidth isn't enough to support streaming video or streaming music. We used it to keep up with email and weather and various Web sites. Cell phone service was mostly 1 or 2 bars in the loft, although there were two times, over a week, when we saw "No Service" on our Verizon phones. There's also a landline for calls within the US, which worked fine. There's a TV but no cable/dish or broadcast antenna, so the owners provide a list of DVD's you can borrow, or you can bring your own (as we did)--the DVD player is not Blu-Ray, just standard definition.
We hope to come back to this area, and when we do, we'll stay right here at the loft again.