Saturday, January 3, 2015

Big Project Cedar Tongue and Groove Ceiling.

Once the structure was up, it was time to work on the ceiling.  We hired someone to do the structure.  And we weren't sure what the plan was for the finishes.  And then, one fateful June evening, we stopped by a neighbor's firepit and had a lovely glass of red wine.  A fateful glass of wine.  After an hour of conversation, and another glass of wine, I was convinced that we could do this . . .we could install the ceiling ourselves. It was a LOT of work. But we LOVE the finished project. It's so much better than we could have imagined.  We were so fortunate to have the help and guidance of a neighbor who had recently retired from years of construction site management.  I learned so very much and had a terrific time.  His generosity cannot be matched.  We worked SO hard, and the finished product is everything we could have wanted.

The ceiling before.

After day 1.

Day 2.

Day 3

More Day 3--you can see the scaffolding we rented to do the job.

All finished aside from a few small pieces in the closet.

The finished ceiling.

The hatch--took a long time, but worth the end product.

You can see the missing pieces in the closet.

Finished product.

View from below.

And we hired someone to install the siding up high . . .well worth it.

The BIG project continued.


Once the concrete cured, and we waited through winter it was time to start on the construction in earnest (and a little more demolition).  These pics are not quite in order, but close enough.

Here are the stairs once the plastic came off.







Brennan took his turn with the jackhammer.

Brady too!  We were removing the hot tub pad.
.



Opposite wall with siding installed on interior.


Roofing being delivered.
First walls going up.

Looking up at the new patio once roofing was installed.
Far wall going in.


The outside pre-siding,Next up is the ceiling install and the exterior siding.

Friday, June 6, 2014

The BIG project



We have been soooooo busy working on the yard updates.  Way back at the end of August/beginning of September in 2013 I removed the first deck board.  From then on it has been slow, but steady progress.  Here is the before (the way before):



Long time ago before--closer to when we bought the house.




Here is a more recent before


Before of the front deck
Before of the side deck and kitchen door
 Then the work began.  First order of business was removing the existing decking.  A local high school wanted the wood to burn for the homecoming bonfire.  It was me, a crowbar and my tractor.

The main deck
More of the main deck.  The structure underneath was terribly rotted.

Once the deck was removed there was an incredible amount of dirt that needed to be moved.
 We had to leave the deck by the kitchen door until right before the concrete guys came (so that we could keep using that door).

Remaining deck by kitchen door.
Similarly, we had to keep the front deck . . .but I did not get a picture of that.  The front deck stayed until well into the construction project.  It was only removed once the new pathways went in up front.

Right before Thanksgiving they came to do the concrete.

Upper patio and retaining walls were framed and poured first

Lower patio
What started as a sidewalk behind the volleyball court soon grew to a small patio



First concrete truck, to do footings and walls

Once the concrete was in, it had to cure under plastic for about a week before they sealed it.
Next up, construction and progress on the landscaping.















Friday, September 6, 2013

Rich with blueberries

It seems like not long ago when I tracked down my first set of mature blueberry bushes and planted them.  I happily dragged home five of them from a craigslist listing for a blueberry farm that was being cleared.  It's been several years, and I never got a decent crop. Not even close.  Last winter I had the opportunity to attend a blueberry pruning and care class.  I bundled up early one rainy and cold Saturday morning and headed out to a nearby farm co-op.  I put my new found knowledge to use and pruned and fertilized mid-winter.  When the annual rotary tree sale came around I bargained for loads of sawdust and layered it up on my blueberry patch.  Meanwhile, I had planted many more bushes knowing that they take years to mature.  Instead of just the eight, I upped patch to 40 bushes.  Yes, four-oh.

Well, I have been rewarded for my efforts.  This year we had lots and lots of blueberries.  From eight bushes.  Just eight gave us more than we could use and freeze.  The other baby bushes didn't produce anything at all, as expected.

Now what?  What in the world will I do with berries from 40 bushes?  I'm sure we will come up with something.  And in the meantime, we're pondering planting grapes.  I'm pretty sure the grapes will go the way of the blueberries.  We will over-plant and then we'll be faced with what to do with all the fruit once it starts producing three years down the road.  Sometimes I think I just plant guilt.  Because I feel so guilty any time I produce food that goes to waste.  But I also feel guilty if such great soil goes unplanted.  What to do?

We will figure something out, I am sure.  And I love the look of the blueberry patch.  Just as I imagine we will enjoy the look of the grapes vines.  And the cherry orchard. And the apple trees in that same orchard. It's finally starting to look like a real farm around here.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

New Kids

Our herd is growing!  It more than doubled yesterday, with the addition of these three:
 This is Leroy. He's a character and his name suits him. He is 3 years old, and full grown. He's a dwarf Nigerian.
 This is Sparky, but he needs a new name.  He is Boer and still a baby.  He has a lot of growing to do and will end up the same size as the two goats we already had (Elvis and Missy)
This is Blizzard. He also needs a new name.  He is a baby dwarf Nigerian and is just adorable and super tiny.  I need to get him on film soon, before his voice changes.

Everyone seems to be getting along well so far.  We'll keep our fingers crossed that it continues.

Saturday, March 31, 2012

Spring chores

Spring is teasing us a bit, but I do believe it will eventually arrive.  We have baby chicks moved into the brooder in the barn (almost ready to head into the coop with the big girls).  Lots and lots of projects around here.  A few of my favorites:








Getting garden beds ready and then planting.  Last weekend I amended with the big bags of organic stuff I fetched from southeast Portland.  Here is what one of the beds looks like today.


I plan to amend with compost soon.  You see, I made compost.  I did.  I really did.  Finally.  I think it took three years.  My determination is bolstered by the fact that I did actually create some.  Now I just have to figure out how to do it faster.  In any case, isn't it pretty?



And then there's this.  I have this big pile of bricks (the remnants of the mailbox monument we knocked down last year).  I've decided that I need to build a quirky path up to my greenhouse with them.  It's much cuter in my mind than it looks now . . .but I still have work to do. 

 This is just the rough layout.  The fitting in and sanding it all will take some time, but not nearly as much work as fetching those bricks from the goat pen (you know how goat helpers are).


And, finally, it wouldn't be Spring without the crazy chicken doing her thing.  So far this week I have fetched 3 eggs out of garage, from behind a case of chili.  I found one in the barn, on the workbench today.  And then there was this pile that was discovered in the compost bin.  This chicken definitely takes her breed to heart (she's an Aracauna which are the "easter eggers").  I think she just misunderstood . . .that was for the coloring, not for the hiding.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

If I had only known what was coming . . . .

I thought the wildlife was bad . . .and then we got this kind of wild life!  A drunk driver missed a turn, trashed our fence, took out a utility pole and landed in our pasture, spreading glass everywhere, and necessitating a lifeflight helicopter landing in our pasture.  I've spent far too much time in the past two weeks dealing with insurance adjustors, estimators of all sorts, and the district attorney.  I no longer ask, "What next?!"  Because, frankly, I don't want to know!

In the meantime, I did manage to squeeze some productivity and fun into this unseasonably warm weather.
. . . like planting an additional 12 blueberry plants, bringing the grand total to 40.  We'll see what this year's harvest brings . . .

 . . . tried my hand at (sort of) sourdough bread . . .
. . . let the hens out in the garden . . .
 . . . more pics with the new camera (this one of the tree out front on a sunny day) . . .
 . . . lots of soccer this weekend (7 soccer games and 1 basketball game for the family this weekend) . . .
 . . . watched my silly boys just being silly . . . .
 . . . kept a safe distance from the slice-and-dice kitty that looks so peaceful and cute while she is sleeping . . .
 . . . and, finally, visited the cute litte piggies that moved in next door yesterday. 

I love where I live!!