Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from October, 2021

Interior ceiling (basically) done

  Wow, the second side went a lot faster than the first! We got the tongue-and-groove down to the wall on the east side of the ceiling today, wrapping up a six-day work week.   This is Jeff, the guy that taught me and helped me install all that T&G.   I also managed to touch up those corners I fixed up with bondo earlier in the week. On Sunday I had an hour to kill, so I finished up the last courses in the upper loft. They're trickier because they have to be ripped, and the rip width varies along the length of the wall because the framing isn't perfectly even. (All the first floor framing is perfect because Eliot and I did it :) They still need a trim strip, like the great room walls.

Running water day

  Today I showed up to an open gate ... and a dump truck and an excavator. Jason & Dave were getting started digging to place our water reservoir.       Later Kelly showed up to plumb the tank and the pump.      Then Dave shaped the driveway, making a little berm to reduce the temptation to drive on the tank.   Now our house has running water! Only one fixture is connected, this garden spigot. Meanwhile, Jeff and I kept pushing on the tongue and groove. We completed the west ceiling today!

Wood paneling the ceiling

It's a cabin; it should have lots of wood. So the great room ceiling is paneled in tongue-and-groove. We're using a prefinished product, which is great because applying finishes is really boring. Here are the first few courses getting started. My helper is Jeff from Selah. He knows his stuff; I'm really glad to have him on around to teach me about finish work. I'm hoping he'll want to come out some more.   Our first task on Monday was to make a safe way to operate at ceiling height. We built platforms on the oft-abused collar ties, and then used ladders on those for the very highest bits. After Jeff went home, I used a chainsaw to cut up a couple logs I'd left in the driveway.     On Tuesday we got quite a bit farther down the ceiling. After Jeff went home, I tried splitting some of the wood. I succeeded, but it was the wood handle of my axe that split. Guess I can burn it now.   On Wednesday we got down to the collar ties. That's Jeff marking the ceiling to...

Starting on upstairs shower walls

We did most of our work Sunday. Christina and Jon and Siggy worked on the upstairs shower stall.     Kids played Uno.     I'm not sure if it's the same squirrel every time, but this guy lives here and gives me a lot of chatter. Jon came by Saturday afternoon to drop off the Wedi board for the shower. He did another little dump run, and fastened the spare wheel on the snowmobile trailer.

Cleaning up and getting ready

Not a lot of completed work to show for the weekend; we're mostly getting things ready for later work and later fun. A delivery of 300 prefinished tongue and groove boards showed up Friday. We loaded it into the house and turned on some electric heat to bring everything up to a stable temperature. Our garbage pile had grown pretty huge, so we hooked up the big trailer and loaded it up with literally a ton of trash. We also managed to give away some better leftovers on Craigslist. Last, we unloaded the snowmobile trailer and got it roadworthy. Siggy's bringing the spare tire up to fill. That was to prepare for Sunday's adventure. Christina had found a couple pretty nice snowmobiles on Craigslist. We pulled the trailer to Federal way to pick them up, then drove back up to the cabin to park them until the snow catches up with us.

Master shower

We installed almost all the walls for the master bathroom shower this weekend.  Most of the magic is sealing the foam-core panels together with Wedi's flexible extra-gooey sealant. Sunday , more panels. We have three panels left that attach to the pony wall, but it's almost done. Meanwhile, Siobhan collected bullseyes.