Thursday, September 20, 2007

Those Walls Are Raised!

Wow! It is so nice to see these two walls standing! We got up before 5 am this morning to meet the guys helping us lift the walls by 6:30 and the walls were standing by 7:07 am. What an experience. I can't really explain in words how nauseating it was for the both of us on the first wall. The wall was SO heavy (though lifting it between the 5 of us, it was really very manageable) but worst of all was the sense of unknowing that came with lifting it and then balancing it into place. You can't see around the edges of the wall, and you can't see the other side of the wall to judge how close it is to the edge of the wall. You have to trust to your measurements (we built the wall along a chalk line, so that we always remained the right distance from the edge of the wall, and we toenailed the bottom plates of the wall into place so it would catch the wall before falling over the edge!) It can still, at times, be very difficult to trust to the work you've put in, and it's amazing how when you are under a very long, very heavy wall, that your confidence level can be low! :-) The second wall was much easier! The wall is exactly the same as the other wall, but Roy kept telling me that it was going to seem much lighter, and the funny thing is, that it DID! It was much easier to lift, and that is probably due to at least having a wee bit of familiarity with the process. My job, due to bad location in the lifting process, and least necessity in holding the unbraced wall, sigh!, was to hold the level and push the wall either in or out while the other guy (Ricky, who is Roy's son) nailed the main brace in place. It is really something challenging to be told "Push that wall out till it's level" when all of your intuition (which is mixed up at this point) is telling you, "Don't push that wall or it will fall over!" But the second time around on that was better too. Still and all, it took both of us about half an hour after the guys left to settle our stomachs! The youngest helper was Roy's nephew, Lyle, who appeared about 22 or maybe only in his teens. He was nice and found our anxiety about the wall raising pretty amusing. :-) He's probably been raising those giant stretches of walls since he was a kid, everyone but Shawn and I were completely nonchalant. I guess we would be too, if we'd done it as many times, though you never know! :-) Two more walls to raise for the exterior and then our framing job for the exterior is over. Then we just tackle the rest of it! :-) More news and updates later, as for now, it's off for a nap and then to enjoy the first two days off in a row we've had in two months, we are going to the MOFGA fair both days are are REALLY REALLY EXCITED! MMMMMM! Bye!
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Wednesday, September 19, 2007

64 feet of walls on the floor

Hi there! We have both of the long walls (that would be the western facing and the eastern facing (roughly)) built and sheathed with plywood. Today we are going to finish the nailing on them, then tack on the ty-par wrap which will be the winter coat for the house till spring when we can reasonably start the clapboard. Tomorrow morning or afternoon, Roy and some other large people are coming to help us raise both walls, and the other two sets of walls we've decided to return to our old method of raising small walls to finish it up. It's hard to conveniently coordinate times when everyone can come over to help raise the walls, and it's a little disturbing to have such massive walls that it is strictly impossible for us to raise on our own. But the advantage to the way we've done it this time around, as Roy explained to us, is that the walls will be very straight and will make siding easier when we get to that point. It's actually faster to build the walls this way, we think, and squaring them up wasn't bad, either, in fact - we think it might have been a bit easier. But they are massive! The one wall had to be constructed over the opening for the stairs, and we're a bit confused as to how easy it will be to raise it with that big opening there, but I guess the advantage to being a builder is that you've pretty much seen it all before. So I guess we'll do alright and update again later.

We're starting to get all the work together for having the roof put on, both having the trusses set, and then having metal roofing put on. What a relief to be having that work done for us. It's really high up there, and without the right equipment (here, scaffolding etc) a job can take on pretty nightmarish qualities! We have had two masons come out to give us an estimate on doing a block and brick chimney and it seems that we are not too late to get the chimney in after all. (SIGH OF RELIEF). There's a lot to get done before snow fly, but it seems to be coming together reasonably well. We called an electrician who is quite nice and willing to run the conduit from the CMP pole (Central Maine Power) to the house, look over our electric plan and also set our electric panel for us. This is great news for us, as we can do the rest of the electric work ourselves, and have the important part checked ahead of time by a pro. The fellow is nice and offered consulting work to us at an hourly rate if it's something we should need later on. Last on the list is to have the plumbing roughed in - which we have a contact for as well. And then it's just many hours of work ahead.

Speaking of hours of work ahead, it's time to go.
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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

the real stairway to heaven

It doesn't lead to anywhere but up yet, but the stairs are in. We finished them on...Saturday the 8th of September. It took a couple of days to get them sorted out. Roy came over on Thursday to help us properly take the measurements and showed us how to properly scribe the stairs, then we cut them out after he left. To make the stringers, you get your measurements for the rise and run, and essentially jiggle your division until you reach the right number of treads for the space you need to stretch the staircase. It's more difficult than it sounds for beginners like us, but part of the beauty of doing something with someone who not only knows their field well, but also knows it well enough to communicate the essence of it simply and effectively, is that you suddenly realize that it's not as difficult as it seems. Nor is it as easy! Anyway, we cut out the templates, and then took a bit of time to cut all the risers and treads and get them into place. The stairs you see here are temporary stairs. One of the few areas that code is strict in Belfast is with stair treads. No nosing can be sticking out. So our final step with the stairs before occupancy inspection will be to put a clamshell nosing on the edge of the stairs where you can see a gap between the riser and the tread.

In other news...we got rained out Sunday afternoon and yesterday, and today is rainy, too, but we're going to head to Belfast anyway. It's not raining most of the day and we have a lot to do. We are working to plywood the basement, cutting out the windows as we go. We put in an order for our windows to get a final on the cost (it's expensive, now to determine exactly what the damage will be). We also talked with Roy about having the roof done by his son's contracting company. It's really high up there, and we have decided to use trusses instead of stick building the roof. The heights are a bit much for Shawn, and I don't think that I can be exceptionally effective up there either, especially if my job is to hand up sheets of plywood or 16 foot pieces of metal roofing. :-) It's been a tremendous relief to us to decide and have that part done. Roy was telling us how they set up staging for roof work, by setting up scaffolding all the way around the area, which provides about 6 feet of working space for the builders, along with a back support, so the illusion of not being up in the air is created, while also providing safety and a good working space. A little easier for them than us. We will continue to finish off the second floor, though the walls we build for the second floor we're going to build in 32 foot sections on the long side, and then Roy and his son and a nephew are going to come by one afternoon and help us raise them. Roy suggested this would be helpful to do, since it will keep the wall perfectly straight and that will help with siding later on (we're having that done, too).

That's all the news from here. It felt very very strange to stay home yesterday. We worked something like 35 days straight. It left us at a loss! We both missed the work! But it would be untrue to say that it wasn't nice to sleep (UNTIL NINE!!!!!) in and have time to make bread and do some things that have fallen to the wayside this last month. Now we have lots of bread, plenty of rest under our belts, and more work to do ahead of us. Two weeks till the Common Ground Fair. Check out the details at www.mofga.com - we are really excited and taking three days off to attend each day of the fair!

Bye!
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Wednesday, September 5, 2007

Goodbye Floor One

The rim joists are on, at last. That took a couple of days, along with some other things. Yesterday we laid/hung the joists for the other side of the stairwell, and put blocking in to all the joists, and then hoisted up all the rim joists, which we agreed was the most difficult part of the job so far. I really do think that there's a good deal of value in realizing by doing that you can do things you are uncomfortable or flat out afraid of, but it's still hard work, and while I'm glad to know that I can balance high on a ladder with my half (or third, sorry Shawn) of a two by twelve by sixteen, I'm still delighted to know that that work is behind us. The last most difficult thing will be the roof rafters, but at least I will be standing on solid ground at that point, and we are done with 2 by 12's. So the work was very challenging but is now complete, and I feel much more comfortable on a ladder. It takes a while to trust that it isn't going to fall through a wall. :-) Today's work is plywood work - we left the joists off of the mudroom so we can hoist plywood up through there and onto the joists. Then we'll make a path across the subfloor with that and walk our boards over. Tomorrow Roy is coming over to help us frame and construct the stairs for the first floor, and we'll also have his help to scribe and measure properly for the basement stairs. He is a great guy. He'll let us do most of the work, but give us all the tips and share his knowledge, which is immense and greatly appreciated. He also is going to show us how to safely raise walls on the second floor. There's a trick that's used commonly where you toenail the bottom plate of the wall into the subfloor as you are building (after snapping chalk lines). Then you raise the constructed wall into place, and the lifting process pulls all the toenailed nails out, but keeps the wall from tipping out of position (and hence down onto the ground below) while you are doing it. Added security. Nice.

We were considering yesterday that we are about 50% done with the work now. We've done the basement and first floor, and have the second floor and the roof to do. But we won't get any closer than that if I don't get off the computer and get up to work. Bye!
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Monday, September 3, 2007

hi there, we got the kitchen and dining room joists done up top, they were 12 foot lengths, and very easy to handle. The joists above the living room are a 16 foot span, and that's an awfully large board. We carry them over from the pile, push them up in the open door of the dining room, and then slide them across the floor. Then we set one end of the board on the top of one wall, and hoist the other up onto the ladder at the other wall, and then set them into place. Surprisingly, it's very easy to toenail the joists into place, and the whole process went really smoothly, we got two thirds of the house done yesterday, no joist hangers! Shawn is re-joisting over that fact alone, as he is decidedly not a fan of hammering dozens of joist hangers in (each takes 12 nails and they all seem to have to be hammered in from a bizarre position where you tilt your body like a broken windmill and then crank your arms at a diagonal into the air and then hammer from that inconvenient position with your neck also tweaked in a funny way). We hope to finish up the joists today, there are only four more for the living room and then framing up the stairwell area (not building the stairs yet, Roy is going to share some of his expertise with us when it comes to stairs). The mudroom has to have separate joists laid, only 8 inch joists, as it's only for the one floor and there isn't a second floor to it. There will be a few joist hangers there, but they are a smaller size. That's about all. We hope to finish the joists and get the rim joists up as well, and then it will be time to start stairs and maybe hoist a few plywood sheets up the other way around. Which is by ladder. :-)
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interior walls

see what you can make of this picture. Inside pictures were really difficult to take, you can't lean quite far enough out of the window to take them properly, and I am currently unable to levitate outside the house itself, so inside shots continue to be a challenge. I am getting more comfortable on a ladder, so perhaps we'll all be surprised some time soon. I still am not terribly fond of ladders, though. No issues with edges or high places if my feet are on the ground, but on a ladder I have to really restructure my thinking, which isn't always terribly successful. I think Shawn and I will have to fuse our strengths in that regard, as he does very well on ladders, but not so well looking down from heights or being at edges, and I am the opposite. :-)
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I can't remember the last posting I made, but we have finished the exterior walls of the house. The interior feels like a good size, the basement makes the house feel humongous. Holy cow!! The second floor is on the way, and should be a nice one to do, as there isn't a mudroom attached. We also finished up the interior walls for the first floor, and put all the top plates on, inside and out. The top plates are really interesting in that they really do firm up the walls a great deal. We're looking pretty square, all the way around, which is a great relief and a testament to shawn's good measuring. :-) We're out about a quarter inch in one corner, but we seem to be able to keep it under control and are doing our best. :-)

What else? I'll upload some more pictures next. We are currently laying the joists for the second floor and will be glad to be done with 2x12x16 foot lumber, which is hard to run around with. It does leave strikingly colored bruises all over the place, so you can trace it's resting spots on your thigh muscles later on. :-)

We're off to do some work, thanks for reading.
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