The snows of the past few weeks have come and gone. The damage wasn't too bad and not a lot of time was wasted by the weather. We got a bit over ten inches of snow in the second storm. Nothing bad happened, but we did need to spent a day removing snow from the low pitched roof of the tiny home cabin. We never built the cabin for snow, so it really isn't built to hold the enormous weight of ten inches of snow. The first four inch snow storm took out the Shop hoop house and there wasn't enough time to rebuild before the second storm rolled in and dumped ten more inches. So we'll still need to rebuild the Shop pretty soon. We had planned on moving our Greenhouse out into the Market Garden a few weeks back. So this will happen before the end of the month.
There are only five interior doors. Two are sliding "pocket" doors, three of them swinging. We bought these really beautiful glass doors months ago from a bluff house remodel in Pacific City. We had found them on Craigslist and the builder delivered them to our shipping container. They have sat for nearly a year now.
The picture to the left is the Laundry room pocket door we have installed. We put the lighting inside the Landry room so that it backlights the glass door super well. The door frames are clear hemlock and the glass panel is beautifully etched with a wheat motif that is as farm-y as we could have hoped for. Eventually we will be painting all of the woodwork in the house but we haven't decided on a color yet. I never put in a pocket door and it turned out to be much easier than it looked because they sell a kit down at the Home Depot. We put the two pocket doors in on Friday and I began mortising out the hinges on the door jambs. It is an exacting project, much more difficult than putting in pocket doors.
We'll need to make a run into town to purchase another large load of drywall this coming week. The most we can put on our little truck is thirty-fours sheets. Buying this amount lowers the price of each sheet by about two dollars, so it is well worth moving this much at a single time, but the weight is serious enough to drive the truck slower.
It doesn't take long to put the drywall up, but fitting around doors, windows, outlets, and switches takes some careful measuring. So far it has all gone very well. We have all of the lights and bathroom fans in and working now. We also have one of the small electric heaters in so the entire space is heated as well as lit.
The ceiling of the main room is fourteen feet from the floor and, since we have to use a much heavier sheet of drywall, we have to hoist ieach of the eighty pound sheets up on a lift to get it secured. I have to do much of the climbing, so things are going more slowly in the big room. We hope to have the main room ceiling up this next week so that we can begin insulating the main room. Right now the room is open to the roof and any heat goes straight up and out the roof vents. Once we have the ceiling and upper walls of the big room in the house ought to be easily heated. We designed the place to be heated using under floor heating, so it should be comfortable throughout using the one heater we already have installed.
We spent a bit of time putting down some straw to cover the mud on our walking paths. Our chickens simply love hunting the grain out of it. We also pruned all of the fruit trees around the Farm on the one day between storms. I think the Winter is mostly over. There will still be more rain, but the worst is probably over.
All in all, despite the weather and a few minor set-backs, things are still moving forward pretty well here.
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