Friday, December 21, 2012

It's the Plumber, I've Come to Fix the Sink

Our tub came to Lopez in a 500 pound crate. The truck was too big to cut the corner to the house, so they transferred it to Neal's pickup at Sunset with their fork lift.

Once home with the tub, Neal was alone.  He parked parallel to the front of the house, and piled some pallets behind his truck.  Then he used a come-along tied off to a small cedar tree by the house.  He had managed to pull the crate out of the truck onto the pallet pile when David showed up.

The two of them rotated the crate on top of the pallet pile  (no, do you believe it?? I SO wish I had been there to photograph this) and then pushed it down a ramp into the house.

Now it's sitting on a deck with castors, so we can move it out of the room he's working in.  We must really want that tub.


Here's the guy who knows what to do with it.  Pete, the Plumber!
As of Solstice, he and Neal had the waste ready, and had started on the supply.  It is a big step to see major work occur on the interior. Fun to watch the two of them figure out the sticky puzzles - like, just how deep does the wall for our Hans-Grohe mixer have to be? They'll finish up the rough-in at the beginning of the new year.

And then we had a white Christmas!



Wednesday, December 19, 2012

November to 2013

Two months without a blog post...wonder what I was up to...searching plumbing fixtures, perhaps? Dragging toilets to the shed to store until we need them in the building? Learning more than I wanted to know about frameless glass shower panels?

Thankfully, Neal continued to work, moving the scaffolding around the house.












Can you tell how high this is? 
 He did the shakes on the front gable (with shakes he split from our land) during a HUGE wind/rain storm.  Yikes.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Coming In

Here's the latest project, done in between setting up scaffolding for shingling, and dealing with the door issue.
Setting rocks

The poles are cedars from the land, peeled in the spring.  It POURED every day he worked on this.


Now all this side needs is the door (and the final fill, to bring up the ground level).
Now he'll juggle painting and finishing the doors with doing the shingling. Two of the three doors are here now...

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Tarring and Papering

While we were on choose-the-woodstove detail,  Neal cranked away at WACK WACK WACKing tar paper on, installing windows, and detailing the beautiful cedar siding on the lower half of the building. He was almost done, but not quite.

The first rain of the season brought 1 1/2 " in two days. On the second day,  we broke out the buckets to catch drips from the unpapered areas (south facing windowseat roof, maybe?).  Uh, time to get the rest of that paper on.

Neal, Uma and I finished the east face on Sunday afternoon, windows and all.


This was taken around the 24th:  gutters and downspouts are on.  This is a big step.  We're trying to remind each other of our progress. It helps when dealing with the myriad of small problems that come up.  Like what?

Like, the reason why no doors are installed...
We're still waiting the 5 week leadtime for the doors that have the required low-e glazing, that was expected. 

But the clear glazed front door was supposed to come in 7-10 days.  Twenty days later, it arrived - an inch shorter than expected.  So what's an inch?  Well, trim that no longer aligns.  Windows next to the door that don't align.  And a stumpier look (we had wanted taller doors, but balked at the increased cost of the "special" size).

So, now we're waiting another 7-10 days for a door that is the height Neal framed for it.

And look, the roof and the gutters are on!!


Thursday, October 11, 2012

50 year hat

The upcoming rains became the daily topic with everyone...when would they start...when was the last time we've had so many days of sun in a row?  And in the sun, Neal & Kenny got the upper roof on.


Neal started on the lower roof, but had to hold off.
Why?

This little guy.
Before Neal could put it in, he had to know WHERE.  And that depended on the stove it was connected to.  The best draft happens with a straight pipe, no turns.

Masonry stove?  Wood stove?  Steel (convection)? Cast iron (radiant)? Soapstone (slow steady heat)?

We went on a massive stove researching week.  Which stretched into two.

And finally, we chose a combination stove that has a steel firebox with an enameled cast iron casing.  It's a little clunky looking, but from what we learned, it will be the stove for the way we use wood heat.  Check out the Alderlea T5 here:  http://www.chimneysweeponline.com/pacaldert5.htm

It even has a cooking surface with warming wings - the only one we saw with anything like it.



So then he could continue.
And fuss through the skylight details, with Bruce's help.
What's that?  The first rain of the season, right after the roof went on?  Yahoo!


Friday, September 21, 2012

Yet another Big Truck

Lopez Ready Mix (Bob) is getting good at backing their cement trucks down our driveway and around the corner to the house.




 Huck, thank you!!

As he was driving the truck away, Bob asked:  "What is that room anyway?"
We love that question!  The front entry is a response to our site and this (I've lived here long enough now to be annoyed by our 'temperate') climate.

It's a wind break.  There is an exterior door opening to the south and french doors opening to the inside of the house.
The new concrete floor will be thermal mass (for collecting heat and releasing it at night).
The skylights and the windows (all with clear glazing, not low-E, because this is "unheated space"!  ...brilliant...) will bring in heat, which we can move into the house by opening the inner french doors. 
And, not to be ignored, this is where Neal's citrus plants will live...he's a lemonhead...did you know?

And as a foil to all the trucks and cement, here's a shot of Uma in the orchard.  Note the shadows! Must be sun coming through the clouds.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Ms. LULL stops by

Mitrebox sent over the Lull to help out today

Tom squeaked her in past the studio
And held our second floor sheetrock outside our bedroom window.  Then Neal, Bruce, David and I brought it through the window and stacked it inside.  No, we're not ready for hanging sheetrock.  But we want to install the upstairs windows, and it would be a trick to bring all that rock up the stairway.

What a monster machine - and what a break for our backs!




Friday, September 14, 2012

August was for playing



But now he's back. Quick, get it dried in before the rain starts!




 First window, installed and trimmed out













 Uma's room, all three windows in, with reverse board and batten done on the first floor.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Quiet on the site

Walked in after work to find two chipmunks layed out -  one in the living room, one in the bathroom.
Deenah is protesting being left behind.

Where is he?
Where am I?



Thursday, July 26, 2012

Go ahead and rain...

...we don't care anymore!  Neal, Kenny and Stephen snuck in between rain clouds and put on the big roof on Saturday the 23rd.  Sunday morning we woke to drops on the roof, and sighed in relief.  You won't have to listen to us complaining about how often our house is getting wet anymore.


While they did the roof, I was off-island picking up our Bertazzoni. It will be in the Cabin until the house is ready. Neal's first dinner on it:  Indian curry with fresh paneer for the two of us, Uma and Ashi.  Yum.
Over the past two days, Neal has been working on the front edges. 



Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Angle of Repose

Then it started to rain again.  We've been having crazy storms, with thunder and lighting - odd for here.
In between, they got on the roof again, spending the day at a 8/12 pitch:
What a relief, to have some of the building protected. They finished the upper roof right before another mass of rain came through.