Here's a few pix of things I'd mentioned before, I think.
The dining room ceiling, removed on the recent work day.
Progress on replacing the fascia on the west side of the barn. I hope to get back to this next week after I make a trip to NJ to pick up some antiques from my sister.
Now that the barn stairs are in, I'm really hoping to get the storage room in the barn fixed up pronto.
I got back from a church retreat this afternoon about 4:30 and popped over to WH and spent a VERY enjoyable two or three hours mowing around the property this afternoon. It was so much fun to wheel that tractor around and get stuff done!
A few days ago I had cut down a willow tree which had grown up in the septic drain field. Today I was able to drag it over to the burn pile with the tractor and cut it up a bit more so it wasn't flopping outside my "burn zone." What is so satisfying about dragging around half a tree? I don't know, but it does give a good feeling of accomplishment.
I flooded my gas powered chain saw when I was trying to start it, so I hauled out the Alligator again. It made short work (pun intended) of that willow, let me tell you. The more I use it, the more I like it.
Off to shower and bed. I run the AV at church tomorrow morning, so I have to be up and out early.
Cheerz!
Doug
Saturday, April 25, 2009
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Progress!
Today saw more tangible progress than any day in the last few months except the work day.
We ran up the flags first thing to see them wave in the breeze today. For those who haven't seen it, the yellow and green flag has an applique of a walnut seed and leaves on it.
So, off to the local lumber yard and home again, with two new stringers. We got out the saw horses and used the center stringer as a pattern to cut the two new ones. Charlie did a good job with the cutting and we soon were able to mount the three, assemble the spacers and begin laying treads. Charlie cut treads in the shop on the miter saw and brought them over to me, I'd screw them down and it all went like clockwork. I love my Hitachi imact driver gizmo. That thing makes driving screws SOooooo easy.
We were able to pack up and roll out of there about 4:30 and spend some time over to my friend Todd's. He had some dead limbs in some trees in his yard and we helped him cut them out and saw them up for firewood. Charlie did a good bit of the tree climbing but we had a hard time keeping Todd out of the tree on the second one. ;) We mainly used my Alligator electric chain saw/lopper. It looks like a hokey Harry Homeowner tool, but that thing ate through some pretty big branches like nobody's business. The safety aspect of having the chain saw bar encased in some shields is a GREAT idea on someone's part. Made us feel very confident when cutting up high in a tree. I had to use the chain saw a few times but it went off without incident.
Then we tried to figure out how to connect a trailer light plug to the truck so that I can tow a trailer ok. That didn't work out so well. The plugs under the back of my truck didn't do what I thought they should do. :( So, we abandoned that project until I can research that one a bit more.
We thus turned to the other high priority item for the day's agenda and began to fix the stairs to the barn loft. My young friend Charlie and I were able to "dismount" the stair stringers and solve a puzzle that blocked progress a while ago. For some reason the stringer in the middle was one inch higher than the ones on the outside when I tried to assemble the stairs a few weeks ago. But everything checked out to be dimensionally the same. I considered that they were bowed but when I tried to sight along them they appeared to be pretty straight.
Once we took down the three stringers and laid them atop one another on the grass the problem was immediately apparent. They were cut last October and the lumber had shrunk over the winter as the wood dried, making the two outside stringers "bow" towards the top, where they were notched for the treads. Thus they "sank" an inch relative to the center stringer that stayed straight. Lesson learned. If you cut it, assemble it. :) The reason the center one didn't bow was because there were notches cut into the bottom of it for the spacers that tie the three together. That relieved the tension on that side of the board, so it didn't bow.
D'oh. I should have known all that. Live and re-learn... :) In this shot you can see the bow in one of the outside stringers. Fortunately, I think I can cut them shorter and reuse them in other parts of the house later on.
We were able to pack up and roll out of there about 4:30 and spend some time over to my friend Todd's. He had some dead limbs in some trees in his yard and we helped him cut them out and saw them up for firewood. Charlie did a good bit of the tree climbing but we had a hard time keeping Todd out of the tree on the second one. ;) We mainly used my Alligator electric chain saw/lopper. It looks like a hokey Harry Homeowner tool, but that thing ate through some pretty big branches like nobody's business. The safety aspect of having the chain saw bar encased in some shields is a GREAT idea on someone's part. Made us feel very confident when cutting up high in a tree. I had to use the chain saw a few times but it went off without incident.Todd's family invited us to dinner and a good time was had by all. I'm headed to shower and bed and will sleep soundly tonight! :)
There are a few more pix at this address:
Doug
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Eloise lives!
I'd been so busy with urgent things that the important thing of getting her running kept getting shoved to the back burner. So Dan's birthday gift to me was to bring over Merritt, who's a mechanic of the old school, and get her going. It took us four hours, but we managed to get her fired up. She still needs a major tune up (parts are ordered and on the way) and fluids changed. Her mower deck needs a major clean/sharpen/balance/lube job, but we're well on our way.
I had bought a water pump for her some time ago and discovered when I went to install it that it didn't clear the fan blades. With Merritt's encouragement I went at it with the grinder and took the end off the shaft that stuck out in the way. So now I can get that installed and put all of the sheet metal back on that I'd left off for so long. I'm MOST grateful for this delightful present.
Now it will take me only a short while to cut the grass instead of hours and hours with the walk-behind mower. Now I can rearrange the pontoon boats on the property to a much less visible position. Now I can cut down trees along the road and drag their carcasses up the hill to be cut up.
Hurrah for Eloise!
This week's busy-ness and the rainy weather has kept me from the stair project, but here's hoping I can get to it tomorrow (Thursday) or Monday. Two trips with school kids Friday and Saturday and a packed day Sunday. Never a dull moment around here!
I need to get those stairs finished pronto because I've got to bring down from NJ a piece of furniture next week and it's a very nice old antique that I don't want to juggle up to the loft by hook or by crook.
April showers are bringing May flowers today, but the weather is supposed to improve tomorrow. :) Hope your week is bright.
Doug
Friday, April 10, 2009
Work of Easter week
I'm still getting over the effects of this last bronchitis episode, so today (Good Friday) was a "stay down and rest" day but this week I was able to get a few things done, with the help of friends.
First off, a view of the dining room ceiling sans plaster, thanks to our friends last weekend.
Fortunately, this exposed some wood rot in the floor of the existing upstairs bathroom. That room is due for gutting and rebuilding too, so this should not be a problem now that we know it's there. The old galvanized steel pipe will be going away too. Part of this bathroom will become the new laundry room so I intend to use some of the DWV piping for that, but install new PEX supply lines.
My friend Ed came over Thursday and we tore up more of the kitchen floor. That new Sawzall really eats through those 2" boards like crazy, a real joy to use. We got the debris out to the burn pile via wheel barrow and it went up nicely, along with the lathe and paneling we pulled off the walls on the last workday. We've had a lot of high winds since the workday and I had to go around the yard and retrieve several pieces of the paneling. :)
And spring is here! Flowers in the old "sumac patch" north of the barn are popping up! No sign of the sumac coming back, thank goodness!
Hope you enjoy this brief sum of the week's news. Happy Easter to all!
We also got a good chunk of the fascia on the west side of the barn ripped off and replaced. It was as old and rotten as the two ends had been, but it protected the structure beneath it, all was sound wood. Getting this installed and the guttering up will help to dry out the barn floor during the spring rains.
We were short about four feet of fascia (how did THAT happen?) so I went for some extra fascia board, which comes in 12' lengths which meant the back door of the truck was open a bit to let the board stick out. As I turned a particular corner on the way home the charger, extra battery and case for my impact driver fell out of the back of the truck. I heard the noise and stopped but didn't see it, figured it was an old suitcase falling over in the back of the truck and went on. By the time I realized the loss and went back someone had picked it up. So we had to halt fascia installation for the day. However, another 20 minutes or so of work and it will be up. I went online today and found the right replacement stuff pretty cheap and it should be here by early next week. It helps to have the right tool for the job and I'm not sure how I got along before I had this one.
Earlier in the week I'd started to work on the stairs to the barn loft, however I've run into a snag which I'd love to figure out, but don't think I'll bother to. The three stringers measure out the same, dimensionally. But when I put them in place, the run of the middle stringer is 1" higher than the run on either of the other two. And the rise on the right hand one seems to be one inch farther back towards the barn. The base pad and top header all appear to be level and square to each other, so there is no detectable deviation there I can see. I'm not sure how that is possible, but I feel like I'm working on an Escher painting somehow. Monday I'm going to take them down and lay them on the ground on top of one another and cut SOMEthing to make them all match. This is one of those "Gordian knot" things. I'd love to figure out the "why" of it, but will settle for a functional solution at this point.
Thursday I was able to "let fly" our new homestead's flag, made by my wife's cousin. It is a wonderful "house warming" gift and looked good up on that pole. Unfortunately the wind wouldn't blow when I wanted a picture so I had to drape it over the back fence to give you a peek. It's an outline of some walnut nuts and leaves on a yellow background. It has the same color scheme as a Civil War hospital flag. Not sure why that amuses me so, but I really enjoy the flag.
In preparation for the relaying of the new kitchen floor, I've been doing some reading on what sort of underlayment will be needed. The existing floor is 2" thick, joist to surface, so I've got lots of room to build a nice stiff floor to lay tile on. Looks like 3/4" plywood subfloor, 3/4" underlayment and 1/2" ceramic tile will about meet the existing floor flush. It's a bit tricky because you have to allow the plywood to give a bit with swings in temp and moisture, but sounds like it can be done. It's not the optimum installation, but looks like it might work.
In preparation for the relaying of the new kitchen floor, I've been doing some reading on what sort of underlayment will be needed. The existing floor is 2" thick, joist to surface, so I've got lots of room to build a nice stiff floor to lay tile on. Looks like 3/4" plywood subfloor, 3/4" underlayment and 1/2" ceramic tile will about meet the existing floor flush. It's a bit tricky because you have to allow the plywood to give a bit with swings in temp and moisture, but sounds like it can be done. It's not the optimum installation, but looks like it might work.
Larger pics are online here: http://home-and-garden.webshots.com/album/570670508DWVwkR
Hope you enjoy this brief sum of the week's news. Happy Easter to all!
Doug
Saturday, April 04, 2009
First Big Workday of 2009 - April 4
We arrived about 8:45 to find a few folks there champing at the bit, ready to go. We soon had the doors open, the power on and everything necessary to the day's work laid out.
The first order of business was to back the utility trailer up to the front door so we could carry debris out and pile it there. All the wood paneling and furring strips were on the trailer and hauled to the burn pile by about 11AM.
A little before lunch we laid down some of the paneling on the dining room floor and began to pull down the plaster ceiling. The dust flew and there were smiles behind those dust masks, I could see. I stayed upwind at a safe distance. (Recent fight with severe bronchitis, fyi.)
We took a nice break for lunch, Pizza Hut pizza and liquid refreshment then went back to it.
The trailer bed was soon full with the ceiling and we carted that off behind the chicken shed and dumped it by about 3:30. For some reason I don't understand the living room ceiling took up more space than the kitchen ceiling, even though it's smaller. We must have carted a bunch of the kitchen debris to the dump at some point. But I don't remember that. Oh, well. We've got LOTs of busted up plaster now! :)
Two intrepid helpers, Tim and Charles, stuck around another couple hours and we removed the bathtub from the existing upstairs bathroom and slid it into the back of the utility trailer. When we get around to having goats and sheep it'll make a great watering trough. I thought it was cast iron but it turned out to be steel. We were a good bit surprised to find out how poorly the seals were made for the plumbing connections. They appear to be just doped up and slid into place, none of the locking rings were tightened up. The connections were probably inacessible behind the ceiling at the time the bathroom was done. Amazing to me that it never seems to have leaked though. The stool and wash basin still have to come out, but we got the lion's share of it. Amazing how much removing some walls opens up a room.
All in all, a great day's work accomplished, we're well on our way!
Next work day will be May 9, and we'll probably start around 10AM since the night before is the Jr-Sr. Banquet at school. Mark your calendar for June 13 also, starting 9ish or perhaps earlier, depending on weather that day.
Here's the picture album, click on the picture on the right. Too tired to tweak them, they're in the raw.
Doug
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