Tuesday, October 11, 2011
Thanksgiving....It's all about the stuffing
But the place is mostly warm now, practically livable even though it went to the low single digits in the night time out there. There's no longer a slow wave of cold air pouring in from the rafters, but I still have some work to do, especially with vapor barrier that will close out the remaining drafts.
It's not so much the insulating that is a struggle, it's the fact that the main ridge beam sits roughly 25ft off the floor. That's 4 layers of scaffolding to build. lots of lifting and make sure you keep your balance.....it's kind of scary up there.
Cheers
Peter
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Milestones...not the restaurant
So I put all this insulation in the place, but it didn't seem any warmer.
"There must be more to it." I thought....Then I read the instructions. Oooh..
So another progressive weekend in Golden. A few major milestones hit:
1. Pulled another U-Haul load out. As you can see lots of insulation in this load. A little over 1000 square feet of R40. Weighs about 1000lbs, basically a pound a foot, or 50lbs a bag. 21 bags in all. Bags are awkward to lug around. Not the 1st one, but 15-16 trips up the stairs and it gets a bit fatiguing.
Watch for these upcoming milestones in our next episode:
1. Deck soffit finished
2. Insulation completed
3. Outside staining finished.
4. Maybe a roof on the mudroom
Monday, August 29, 2011
What I Did On My Summer Vacation....
The topic often chosen by the lazy teacher who has no imagination after two months off sipping crantinies on some cheesy restaurant patio. Thought I'd carry on the tradition for a bit.
Most years, of late anyway, the last week and weekend of August finds me heading to Penticton to suffer it out on the IMC course. By the way, congrats to Kona Johnny, Kyle, Johnny G, Cory and Campbell on their race this weekend. Looked like an awfully hot day. At least it was smoking in Golden.
The parallels between my typical circumstances this time of the year and what I did this year are not lost on me. At the end of the weekend I find myself looking back at my accomplishment saying to myself in some mix of astonishment and pride "I did that!!?? Wow. I've done some crazy sh!t in my day, but that time I really pushed myself to get here. I really didn't think I could pull it off."
When I left last weekend, my goals were high as was my level of ignorance. So here we go..
Saturday August 20:
Run around a lot Saturday morning, get all the stuff I think I need and pack the truck. Get to site pretty late. John Gillis is with me, on his way from Halifax to aforementioned IMC. Great to have the help. When I get there I find John (log-builder not triathlete) has done a great job on the stairs. First time he's ever tried this he tells me. Fine hand with a chainsaw.
Unpack truck. Break out few beers and Q some steaks.
Sunday:
Up pretty early. Start out by realizing I forgot my runners, which means no run training for me for 8 days. That shoots big holes in my October marathon hopes. I start by attacking the wiring for the doors and John gets on stain duty. By end of day we got patio lights, a dining room light and all the doors in. John has stained a good chunk of the left hand side of the cabin.
Monday:
We decide we should tackle the sofift. It's a task I know is a two man job and I only have help for a couple of days.
Tuesday:
Soffit most of the day. Finally get outside the deck done. This was no small job and could not have been accomplished alone. Many thanks to JG for the help here.
Wednesday:
John heads off to IMC leaving me alone to finish what soffit I can. Given the difficulty of the outside piece, I am skeptical I can get any done alone. I am happily mistaken as I find when on a solid level surface you can move pretty fast with this, even on your own. My happiness however soon turns to upset as I find I'm out of wood and HomeHardware in Golden no longer carries the brand I am using. Matching two different t&g boards is no fun at all and nothing I wanted to attempt on my own. So I turn to staining. Start around 4pm on Wednesday where John left off.
Thursday:
Stain. Staging. Stain.
Friday:
Stain. Staging. Stain.
Saturday
Stain. Stain. Stain. There are those who read this blog and would say that I am not a patient person. I think the evidence of my activity over the past 3 days speaks to the contrary. We now have a stained cabin. Nothing 14hrs a day for three straight days, working on ladders and scaffolding in 28 degrees wouldn't fix.
Sunday:
Now is the point in the blog where I hope my mother has lost interest and stopped reading....if she ever reads it at all.
Having run out of stain Saturday afternoon, besides, all the hard bits were done, I look to the next opportunistic task. More wiring???...not urgent. Some plumbing.???...not really necessary. Windows in the basement would be nice....didn't bring them. Sure is cool here in the mornings. Could use the fireplace. I guess I'll tackle the chimney. After climbing up and down the scaffolding to stain the place could this possibly be more challenging.
Builder Dave suggested I put a chimney chase on the top of the roof, which is essentially a box that has a flat roof. This played a big role in my ability to even attempt the installation.
My roof has a 10/12 pitch. That is about 40 degrees. I can say that, with an eave around 26ft in the air, 40degrees is a bit steep, and slipping would be unforgiving. From the inside, the roof is about 22 ft above the living room floor. My task, was to drag a ladder out on the roof and fix it to the chase from the peak, set staging in the house and climb to the roof from there to cut a hole that would fit a 10" dia. cylinder at the box, between the rafters, (by the way this creates an oval for which I can find no equation that would help me simply draw a line to cut it...it was all trial and error) push 3 sections of chimney up there (about 50lbs each), attach a supporting plate to the rafter, scramble to the roof, drop the pipe back down onto the supporting plate, stack and join each pipe so that they are vertical, put the cover back on the chase, put in the interior black pipe, drag the 400lb stove into place and fix the black pipe to the stove. Of course I'm paraphrasing here. 14 hours later, I'd lost count of how many times I'd scurried on all fours up and down the roof, thinking each time, "If you start sliding....". And in the end...."I did that!!?? Wow. I've done some crazy sh!t in my day, but that time I really pushed myself to get here. I really didn't think I could pull it off."
I think I pulled 8 straight 12-14 hour days last week. I'm thinking IMC would have felt better...nahhhh.
I hope my fall vacation is a bit easier.
Cheers
Peter
Sunday, August 14, 2011
What's Cool
I'm sure this is a question that has stymied the masses since the days of Plato.
sure Fonzie is cool.
But he is a person. "Who is cool?" is a totally different question than "What?".
Few could argue the "coolness" of some things. The Mazaratti, for example ranks up there. Hard to deny the wow factor as one streams by you almost silently on the TCH doing 140 in the 100 zone, as your '96 GMC 1500 plods along pulling the little U-Haul trailer full of used cabinets, and an oven you scored on Kijiji.
Perhaps for me the cool factor has deteriorated. What I am convinced is awesome now is plumbing. Yes. indoor running hot and cold water. I've mentioned on this website before the step change in civilization development with the introduction of indoor plumbing, and now that I can brush my teeth indoors I'm blown away at just how cool it is. Never mind not having to tramp into the woods with a roll of TP late at night to go #2.
So the cabin advances. Most of the progress just can't be readily seen. I't electrical, plumbing, stairs etc.. All in all it's starting to turn into a place that's great to visit.
John only has the stairs left to do. He is trying out a new plan that will hopefully appear as though the treads are floating. can't wait to see the final product. No doubt he did a great job on the mud room addition at the end of the deck. I like the scallop he has done so tall folks like jill, Don and Hoop don't hit their head.
The mud room looks ok.
Oh... and I got the first set of french doors in.
these lead out to the deck....but more importantly they keep the mosquitos out.
Cheers
Peter
Monday, July 11, 2011
Construction Zone
10 things I've learned over the past 3 weeks:
1. you will sleep better with $25 worth of beer than a $25 air mattresses from Superstore. Mostly cause the beer will stay in your body longer than the air in the mattress.
2. Owls make a lot of noise. Sure they are wise, but do they have to be so Whooo Whooo in the middle of the night just outside your yet to be installed front window.
3. Sawdust in your rubber boots is really irritating, but taping up the tops with duct tape makes your feet sweat a lot.
4. It's funny how when you are at a campsite you don't smell smokey, but 5 minutes in the Sobey's and you can't get far enough away from yourself. You could swear I smoked a pack of Export Plain in the truck on the way there.
5. I could sleep on bare plywood after 12 hours of hard labor and a nice bottle of red wine emptied 30 minutes prior.
6. Contractors will only do work at the last minute. They should give a course in procrastination.
7. I'm a fan of CBC, but CBC BC on a weekend morning is likely the worst radio I have ever listened to. It is driving me to buy Sirius. Of course CBC owns a big chunk of Sirius, so maybe their plan is working.
8. Civilization can be broken into three stages, 1. running water 2. central heat, 3. Refrigeration. You can have your cell phone, iPod or laptop...I'll put you in the cold with no running water and souring milk for a cuople of days, then come talk to me.
9. Toasting a bagel on an open fire with only a stick as a utensil is a learnable act.
10. When you buy a $4 pillow at Fields, you get a $4 pillow...no more, no less.
So this weekend I had company at the shed. After spending 3 weekends out there on my own, Lara decided to join me and "rough" it for a couple of nights. We are still in construction mode, so the place is pretty messy. Lara did a great job staining the back wall and as compensation I agreed not to put the pics of her peeing the woods on my blog. I will add this one though:
Finally got a shot of the interior now that they have dragged the scaffolding out of there. It still looks like a construction zone....probably cause it is one and I'm just living in denial. I do like the log purlins and posts. The cathedral ceiling looks really good. I don't want to have to get up there to stain though.
It's not pretty, but at least the roof doesn't leak anymore. It's a slow go, but I refer to thing I learned #6.
Monday, June 13, 2011
First Night Camping at the Cabin
Although Boo was out, he didn't bother to come to my side of the valley. And, although there were some blacks around, I actually captured these shots just west of Lake Louise on the drive home.
As for the cabin itself, well I have a roof now, and that really helps keep the rain off..albeit not quite waterproof yet, we still got some shingles and the like to get there.
So I head out there again this weekend, but two nights camping in the living room this time....and I expect I'll have running water this time. That will be a real treat.
Cheers
Peter
Monday, May 23, 2011
...And the Beat Goes On....
Cheers
peter
Saturday, April 30, 2011
Putting Things in Perspective
The wood stove is pretty small, but weighs 400+ pounds.
And the front windows are cut. Now I realize that the previous pictures I took just didn't show a good perspective of the size of the place. It looks a bit more realistic in a photo now.
I was a little worried before the front windows were cut. As can be seen in earlier pictures, it just looks like too much log. Now that these front windows are done the next step will be to cut the rake window slots out of the gables. I like the way it is starting to look. Clearly my fears were unfounded.
Saturday, April 23, 2011
What a Difference a Couple of Weeks Makes
- Logs all done.
- Posts all done
- One gable and one pony wall up.
So only two more walls to put up upstairs and the boys could move straight to the roof. Since three hands at this is way better than 2, they asked me to stick around and help install the remaining two prebuilt walls. Dave working the crane, me and John putting the wall in plance, nailing and bracing in place. Wish I was better working at heights.
Wow, looks like a building. Now I have some reference as to just how this thing will look. Looks like the living room will have a 25 foot ceiling and the upstairs will have a good size bedroom and bathroom. I was more worried about the square footage than I should have been. It actually looks like it should be fine.
Apparently the main ridge beam is next then I guess they will start roofing this week.
Cheers
Peter