Friday June 24
It has been a busy week. A couple of rows of block got laid in the basement and another row of stone on the back wall. The drain tile is in and the sump pit dug in. Sam’s brothers came to help for a day or two but the two and a half inches of rain on Tuesday put us out of business for over a day. The mud in some places was ankle deep and on Wed. morning there was water 4” deep in the basement where we had planned to work. The only benefit to the weather is that it settled the fill prior to the pouring of the footings for the rest of the house which I hope we will be able to accomplish next week if the weather is cooperative. We managed to get back to work on Thursday as things began to dry out but we had to use plank and sheets of corrugated tin to make a path to the site in order to work. Sam proved to be a real trooper working in the mud. I think he is beginning to get his head wrapped around the enormity of what we have undertaken.
Footing poured and the first rows of stone laid on it to begin the four foot frost footings required on constructions this far north. It seems sad to put in so many hours of effort on a wall that will be buried and that no one will ever see. The benefit is that we can use all sorts of material to make it! The limestone from the old horse barn on the property is being reused. This week Roger sent up 3 small truckloads of broken up cement sidewalk that can be laid like stone and will be used as wall material on one of the footings. We will still be short of building materials to get us to ground level all around, so I’m searching for some old foundation or other to make use of and I got a lead on one this week.
Friday July 1
The last two days have offered up 90 plus degree days with dew points in the mid-seventies. We decided to not work in the heat of the day which is fine as there is lots of stripped woodwork to sand from the stack of 120 year old woodwork we will be using on the first floor of the house. We did get lucky this week finding two three by eight foot black cherry pocket doors for use on the second floor. Got them for under $50 and they should look spectacular in one of the second floor bedrooms… either as working doors or maybe even as an actual wall dividing two rooms. That is the nice thing about having an open plan that allows for easy changes in interior walls/rooms …especially on the second floor.
We are expecting severe weather this evening with possible torrential rainfall. There is already a tornado warning to the west of here. When a building site is open care must be taken to watch the weather. With the morning’s forecast in my ears, I went to the site early before the heat became unbearable and moved all the loose stone up on to corrugated metal sheets. If left on the bare ground during a rain they get coated with dirt and require extra hours of cleaning before they can be laid. The old sheets on the ground will keep them relatively clean for when laying commences.
For the last day and a half Wayne’s son, Tom, from California was here and helped us move stone into place. He wanted to watch the process of beginning a foundation as he plans some work of his own like this when he returns west. We had a great time in spite of the heat discussing politics and religion as we worked. He got a workout…both mental and physical before he left and promised to return later in the summer to help again or at least to look at the progress. Projects like this tend to influence the people who stop by to help and they often leave with ideas for their own projects. It seems to me what most people lack is the basic confidence that folks of 100 years ago had in their capabilities. Of course, we put lots of restrictions in the way, like unnecessary codes, convincing our citizens that only experts can do the various tasks of construction. Yet, what our often “uneducated” ancestors built on their own belies this notion. I keep telling Sam that this structure will outlast by generations any of the new wafer board and vinyl palaces built today in the suburbs…both because of how it is being built and because of the charm it will have by nature of its very uniqueness!
We keep stumbling on used or discarded materials to help us along and keep costs down. This week we were promised the furnace for the house by a friend who is installing a newer unit in his house. This gas fired boiler is efficient and will only have to have new natural gas ports installed to replace the current ones used for propane. A neighbor connected us with a friend of his cleaning out an old garage on a farmstead south of here who had a pile of lumber to get rid of. Turned out to be 2x4’s 2x6’s and a pile of 1x12’s all new and stacked away years ago. We will be able to use everything and were most thankful for the pile. Sam even got the stainless steel base from an old cream separator that he hopes to use for making maple syrup in the spring in return for hauling the pile of metal junk out of the garage for recycling. The metal should pay for the gas we needed to pick the wood up!
July 5
Sprinkles in the morning so we turned again to woodwork after sorting out the largest of the piles of stone from the old building on the site. The rest of the day we stripped more woodwork. Got an oak pocket door done on one side. It really looks huge out in the light and the color was magnificent! Two good weather work days lie ahead and I hope to help Sam get some serious stone laid!
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