Always something new

Written by karen on April 5th, 2011

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My baby plants outside to start “hardening”

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Current state of the houses

Spring is in full swing here. It has been warm and lovely all week. The wind has finally died down, and the garden is thriving. We ate our first spinach of the year. Brad’s garlic are shooting up in height and doing great (under some cover now being protected from the quails). Peas, lettuce, and arugula are all doing well outside. The tomatoes and eggplants are outgrowing their pots and have started venturing outside in preparation for transplant, which I hope will be within a week or so.

We are moving ahead with building but having a few fairly major reconsiderations. One is that the on-going pursuit of someone to make adobe bricks for us is resulting in no good options. The price to have bricks made on-site here is escalating, in part because it is not a huge order. (We are only doing a few walls in adobe.) We have talked to several folks about making bricks for us elsewhere, but shipping 36,000 pounds of bricks isn’t very feasible. The project seems simultaneously not big enough and too big. So we are considering (and I am taking a deep breath as I write this) making our own bricks. We’ll see. I am still hoping for another solution, but as Brad says, we are always happier with work we can do ourselves.

Along that same line, as we were getting ready to place the final order for the SIPs for the roof, we had a second thought about that. They are quite expensive and the contract from the supplier was onerous. I wondered out loud about other options. Several phone calls and emails later, we are now considering i-joists with the same spray-in insulation we’ll use between the two external walls. The potential advantages are: 1) cost (and no contract risk) and 2) easier to do the work ourselves. If the R-value is comparable (which we are investigating), we may go this route.

Not much else going on here. We have some visitors coming this week and are also planning a very small neighborhood party for late in the month. The birds are singing, and life is good!

 

Make mine a double

Written by karen on March 23rd, 2011

We’ve gotten the first of the double exterior walls done now. The two 2×4 walls are about 11″ wide in total and will be filled with insulation. It makes more sense to see in a picture. The deep window sills will be especially lovely.

I have a really good appreciation now for why houses make such weird sounds at night. When you build, you want everything to be square, but the materials seldom are — boards are twisted, bowed, and warped; slabs have dips and uneven spots. You do what you can to twist, pry, and cajole everything in place to be square, but it easy to imagine all the pieces cracking and popping as they settle in over the years. Add to that a very heavy roof pressing everything down. If kids knew how houses were put together, they probably wouldn’t be so scared of all those noises in the night.

 

We’re back

Written by karen on March 17th, 2011

Ten days away was too long, but we got some good work done and worked a little downtime in as well.

Our plants were extraordinarily well cared for while we were gone and have grown amazingly. I had to repot them as soon as I got home.

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Spring has also seemed to have sprung here with temperatures in the 70s and a sudden appearance of green buds on the trees and birds everywhere. I’m glad as I’m more than ready for some warm weather. This weekend I built a new pea trellis in the greenhouse and planted peas, lettuce, and arugula. I’m looking forward to growing more of our own food this year.

Brad found this interesting blog and web site from a guy in west Texas who is doing something like what we are. He talks about thinking about remaking your life and says “Rather than spend the rest of my life busting my ass so I can afford all the modern, pre-packaged conveniences that our ‘advanced’ society provides – I am putting that energy into providing for all my own needs.”

 

Update

Written by karen on February 28th, 2011

Before we take a little hiatus from building, I thought I’d do a quick update on where we are.

It’s been an incredibly windy couple of weeks. We’ve been building walls and leaving them lying on the slab until the wind lets up enough to put the walls vertical. Sometimes that’s been several days later.

At any rate, we now have about two-thirds or so of the outside exterior walls up. (Remember that we are double-framing the exterior walls so there is still a lot to do.) The remaining outside exterior walls are the really tall ones. They will be so heavy that we will need a little help to stand them up.

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We’ve also done of a few of the interior walls (of which there are very few). The bedroom and computer room walls are now up. Here’s a picture. Imagine the lovely double French doors!

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We would never have gotten so far so quickly without our trusty nailgun (which we didn’t have for the other house — though we had no outside wall framing to do for that house either). It has not only saved us a lot of time but also made the walls more solid.

On other fronts, we saw a premier of a great BBC nature special that was shot in our very own Horseshoe canyon. It was fabulous. When it airs, I’ll let you all know.

And best of all, this week, we finally got a final certificate of occupancy with the right address and the right date. It’s been 10 months since we passed our final inspection. Hard to believe the effort required to get the paperwork right, but we’re very glad it’s done!

 

Looking ahead

Written by karen on February 13th, 2011

We had a good week this week. We got a couple more walls framed.

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And yesterday, I did some work on the garden. The big freeze killed the last of my winter lettuce (but not the spinach, interestingly) so I worked on turning everything over and getting compost into the soil for spring. I took apart the worm bin and finally got a good load of compost (the first decent amount). The worms seem to be thriving, and I’ve put a few in the spinning composter and also the garden itself.

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Our seedlings inside are also planted and coming up. So far we have eggplants and cilantro. The tomatoes (top) should be coming up any minute.

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This week is the big fundraiser for our fire and rescue group, so I’ll be cooking — creamy roasted garlic soup, avocado soup (my favorite), walnut and rosemary bread, French bread, and oatmeal muffins. I better get started!

 

The big freeze

Written by karen on February 7th, 2011

So the talk at the Rodeo Cafe this week was all about the big freeze. It’s quite the topic of conversation. Apparently, no one in town took showers for a few days. There isĀ  statewide shortage of pressure pumps, and pipes are broken everywhere.

We got off pretty easy. Only one pipe actually broke, and it was a minor one (to the greenhouse). Brad did report that after thawing part of the tank with my hair dryer, we used a record amount of power. As for me, I still have wine bottles filled with water all over the house…just in case.

We changed the angle on the solar panels again today. That is a sign to me that spring is coming.

 

Bbbbrrrr….

Written by karen on February 4th, 2011

It has been three days since I’ve had a shower.

It has been down to 5 degrees at night the last couple nights, and it hasn’t been over freezing for a couple days. We have no water in the house. At first we thought that it was because the pipes were frozen, despite our careful wrapping and insulating of them. Now it seems that the water in the tank is actually frozen. Not a big deal, but inconvenient.

At least it is sunny. And the house remains very warm. The temperature in the house in the morning has been in the low 60s (with no heat during the night).

I am mildly reassured by rumors that it has not been this cold here in 40 years and not at all reassured to know that everyone else’s pipes have frozen as well.

Postscript: Brad spent several hours de-icing the tank, and we have water again. We are hoping it warms up soon.

 

A spreadsheet and some walls

Written by karen on January 27th, 2011

We got the first walls up today. Man, were these things heavy!

I also wrote a little spreadsheet this week to calculate the heights of studs on a sloped roof wall. We experienced this math problem on the last house — say you have a wall that’s 12 feet long and it’s 95″ tall at one end and 100″ tall at the other (to provide for a low slope roof). What are the stud lengths at 4″, 12″, 24″, etc. all the way down the wall? Now we have a nifty little calculator that lets you plug in the wall length, the high and low measurements, and stud positions. Then it cranks out the length for each one.

Say, is there an app for that?

 

Phase 2 begins

Written by karen on January 24th, 2011

The lines on the new slab are cut and ground. We’re trying out some new designs in a few central places, which I will do something interesting with color on down the road.

Today we started framing walls. Won’t be long now until it looks like something is happening.

I’m calling this phase 2 now…mostly because I don’t think of it as a “second house.”

 

Checkers, anyone?

Written by karen on January 17th, 2011

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Now for the hard work of grinding out all the edges to be smooth!