Sunday 26 July 2020

Corbels

There are decorative corbels below the crown moulding and on the exterior headers for the windows. They used to take me ages to make. Today I knocked one off in a few minutes, and I could kick myself for not figuring out the technique earlier. Dunce.



Thursday 23 July 2020

Open House

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Open House!

We truly hoped the work on the bathroom would be minimal, after all we'd done in the Spring, but it was not to be. We had to take out all the window framing--and the new windows, naturally--because of the extensive rot. Then we had to build a new rough opening, but fortunately, there was new timber to attach this to. Still, it meant that we finished on a low, not a high note!

Wednesday 8 July 2020

July Fire

Isn't that a lovely, cozy wood fire--on July 8?

That's part of the house in there--one of the old rough sawn studs from the bathroom renovation project. Waste not, want not!

It's raining and so dark out we have all the lights on at noon. And it's 16C.

Quite a summer this is shaping up to be!

Monday 6 July 2020

Side Splitting

This isn't one we planted--it's natural regeneration.
It's time has clearly come! We get very high winds here, so I will take this down in the next week or so. Fortunately, it is next to the woodshed, so it's final (and first) journey will be a short one.

Looks a little like Harry Potter's lightning bolt scar, doesn't it? Tree, I dub thee "Harry."

Digging In

We have actually had some rain recently, so I was driven into the cellar once more. With the jackhammer, I smashed up the old post stone (there was a little concrete involved in that as well), a massive slab of shale which split in layers. Then I chiseled a trough linking the new and old footings along the centre line. Then I put together a simple form. For once, I oiled the plywood sides; we'll see if this makes any difference in ease of removal.

My estimates are getting better. I thought this 18' by 4.5 foot section would take 14 30kg bags of Readymix; it took 13, the 6 that had been stacked in the cellar stairs atrium and 8 new bags that I picked up from Kent on Friday. Wilkins was out of concrete mix--apparently, there is a shortage of pressure treated lumber as well. It seems that in New Brunswick, everyone is using the lockdown to complete home improvement projects. The word is that similar supplies are not moving at all in Ontario--people are afraid to go to lumberyards!






I remembered the anchors at the last moment, and I should really have put in three, not two. Still, it's a far cry from my very first concrete project, the corner kneewall and slab under the pump. .

I took the forms off a little later. It's not a bad pour--I missed a little corner, but that will fill in when I pour the next floor slab.