In the meantime I think there is ample spare time to make use of that camera some more...
I know you had fun...com'on admit it!
The house has been on hold for the last few weeks - I am active with the local theater community, and I have been building special effects set pieces for a show and it's been eating up all my spare time. Hopefully I'll be getting rolling again soon! I did get the island installed, although it still needs all the veneer work applied - I'll see about getting a couple of photos. Also, now that the weather is warming up, I'm probably going to be trying to get to some of the outside projects - screen porch, front door, soffits and trim and whatnot.![]()
Will you finish the house already!![]()
Have you been living in it?
Now, remember where I said to note the two pieces of plywood covering the stairway hole to the basement? Well, when you go to move one, and your foot slips and you step out into empty air, things like this happen:
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I ended up not falling the 10' to the concrete, but I did manage to mess up my neck and shoulder pretty well, as well as scare the sh*t out of myself.
Well @Jester369 How ya feeling after the fall? I see your back at it pouring crete and all.
Looking good my man!
Cheers
Jay
Well, that fall was in 2013 so I'm pretty much recovered at this point!![]()
I'm in the process of building a deck, and have only gotten the post holes dug (big problem, rocky soil with bedrock between 16 and 36 inches below grade, and a code depth of 48 inches for footings). i'm glad to see that once the posts are finished that it goes together pretty quick.
Actually, most jurisdictions it would be hard number without a "stamped, engineered solution" or at least a written variance...particularly for piers instead of a continuous foundation. This is based on my experiences in the Midwest. That variance can be as simple as showing the inspector the fact that every hole hit solid rock and having him jot it on the signed inspection report.Is code really a hard 48? Not "48 or bedrock, whichever you hit first"? The whole point of 48 is frost depth, and frost obviously can't get under bedrock. And yes, MUCH faster once the piers are in![]()
My favorite quote in the woodworking forums is.
"A carpenter's house is never done"
Phew! Good thing I'm not a carpenter - I'd be pissed if I never finished this place![]()
So I installed a bathroom fan in my basement bathroom over the past couple of weeks (five min here, five min there really slows down progress). Felt pretty proud of myself. Then I came here and I am utterly ashamed of my lack of skills.
Seriously, though. Nice work. Love to see how it's coming along.
We all started somewhere. This guy's patience and skills far exceed mine the in trim details but I can (22 years later) wire, plumb, frame, drywall, refinish hardwood floors, rebuild a Saturn 1.9L motor without manual (random), roof (though I never will again) and do most anything around the house.
All this from a willingness to make mistakes, desire to learn, and written resources (first books, now internet). FYI, I made lots of mistakes...the list is actually endless.