As the rains were approaching in the Fall of 2020 we were racing to get the house "dried in". I figured we'd spend the late Fall, Winter, and early Spring working on the interior where it was a bit warmer and a whole lot drier. So as October approached I spent all of my time putting tar paper on the roof and securing it against the heavy winds of Winter. The roof did its job and even held out the heavy snow that came in January. Once down from the roof, and having had all of the framing and sheathing inspected, we wrapped the entirety of the vertical surfaces with Tyvek, a sort of plasticized paper product that provides a mostly waterproof layer of protection for the sheathing which underlies the siding. With the house secured against the Winter (mostly) we spent the time between then and now working on the interior. I wrote all of this up as it happened. If you want to know more just look in the archive to the left of this page.
The drywall was a heavy project, but we got through the main part of hanging these heavy panels around the beginning of April. Ann had to go to work on the Farm in April so I have spent nearly every day since then applying drywall "mud", smoothing it all out, and then applying texture and paint. The whole process took nearly eight months. Today we have nearly all the rooms finished and awaiting flooring. I have moved on to (once again) racing against time to put the final exterior siding and roofing on before the rains return in October.
The get the siding done and put the final roofing on we needed a plan. There are many parts to the project. The siding itself, flashing to help direct water away from joints and seams, trim boards, and sealants around the windows and doors. Our son Jackson spent the past few month of his free time putting the lowest course of siding on the house and this will save a great deal of time. The siding treatment we decided on is a simple Board and Batt treatment. To get the job done Ann and I put up three courses of scaffolding with a final platform at the top. If I stand on a six foot ladder on top of all the scaffolding I can reach the top of the gables. As I go along the wall I am nailing up the siding and applying the 1x2 cedar batts as well as sealing things up and installing lighting. There are eight small LED exterior lights under the porch roof to light the porch area and three high intensity LED security light fixtures high up under the gables which will light the entire farm from edge to edge. As I move the scaffolding along the wall I am finishing every job I can while on the scaffolding. These projects include the first course of roofing and the drip edge as well as the siding elements and lights.
It will take another three weeks or so to get all siding parts in place, then it is on to putting the finish roofing on. All of this needs to be done by the end of September and the heat of Summer is just now coming on. So I will spend my mornings on the scaffold, or the roof, and the afternoons working on the final interior projects.
The drywall was a heavy project, but we got through the main part of hanging these heavy panels around the beginning of April. Ann had to go to work on the Farm in April so I have spent nearly every day since then applying drywall "mud", smoothing it all out, and then applying texture and paint. The whole process took nearly eight months. Today we have nearly all the rooms finished and awaiting flooring. I have moved on to (once again) racing against time to put the final exterior siding and roofing on before the rains return in October.
The get the siding done and put the final roofing on we needed a plan. There are many parts to the project. The siding itself, flashing to help direct water away from joints and seams, trim boards, and sealants around the windows and doors. Our son Jackson spent the past few month of his free time putting the lowest course of siding on the house and this will save a great deal of time. The siding treatment we decided on is a simple Board and Batt treatment. To get the job done Ann and I put up three courses of scaffolding with a final platform at the top. If I stand on a six foot ladder on top of all the scaffolding I can reach the top of the gables. As I go along the wall I am nailing up the siding and applying the 1x2 cedar batts as well as sealing things up and installing lighting. There are eight small LED exterior lights under the porch roof to light the porch area and three high intensity LED security light fixtures high up under the gables which will light the entire farm from edge to edge. As I move the scaffolding along the wall I am finishing every job I can while on the scaffolding. These projects include the first course of roofing and the drip edge as well as the siding elements and lights.
It will take another three weeks or so to get all siding parts in place, then it is on to putting the finish roofing on. All of this needs to be done by the end of September and the heat of Summer is just now coming on. So I will spend my mornings on the scaffold, or the roof, and the afternoons working on the final interior projects.
We have much of what we need to finish the house and can see a day when we can actually move into the house. So for the past few weeks we have been thinking about furniture. We kept so little of the furniture from our house in North Plains, some key pieces are out in the Shipping Container, and we have been acquiring things along the way, but a new couch was a special thing we were going to need.
Back in 2015, once we had found the property which would become the Farm, we spent a lot of time dreaming up things we would want once the place was built. One of the things we decided we wanted was a chaise sofa we found at Macy's. This bright blue couch sat at the entrance to the Macy's Furniture Store at Clackamas Town Center, a small peacock blue sofa with a chaise at one end. The sofa was much smaller than most house would use but it was large enough for two people who like each other to spend some time on. We journeyed across town to visit our couch at least nine times as our plans were formed and put into place. And I designed the living room area around the eventual presence of this one particular couch. But in 2018 the company quit making our bright blue couch and we had no time to address the problem. We began building the house about the time the World went into lockdown for fifteen months. About a week ago we began looking for something that would fill the place of our long lost dream "chofa". We shopped the city and found a few things that might have worked, but nothing as good as our dreamy blue couch.
This morning we went out to shop for a replacement and had a plan for ten more stores. But on the first stop we ran into a saleswoman that remembered admiring our couch. She also had the perfect replacement in mind. It was about the same size and came in the same color and fabric, so we bought it without hesitation. The sofa will come in October. Another important piece of a house project that is about to become our home.
Through all of this Ann has been keeping up on the Farm. We built a new greenhouse and she planted hundreds of plants in early Spring. Then, as late Spring came along, we worked hard to make new planting places for the new plants. Little happened to show progress through May, but things started to happen around the beginning of June. Today most of what we put in is growing by leaps and bounds. Most of Ann's flowers are in bloom and we have pumpkins and gourds beginning to show up.
We have some guest farmers using some of our extra spaces to plant food for themselves and they came in June to plant their seeds. The plants sprung right up. The plants we put in a month earlier did nothing until those planted directly began to grow. Today we have a respectable amount of growing happening. Not enough to make a profit, but enough to learn how a profit might someday be made.
Since this place is not just about food, much of what Ann is doing involves planting flowers and arranging plants and vegetables in a more interesting way. All of this takes time and learning how to put things together, but some of the new ideas are really beginning to come together.
Since this place is not just about food, much of what Ann is doing involves planting flowers and arranging plants and vegetables in a more interesting way. All of this takes time and learning how to put things together, but some of the new ideas are really beginning to come together.
The Market Garden is showing explosive growth.
We'll be harvesting potatoes this coming week.
We'll be harvesting potatoes this coming week.
Putting down the landscape fabric has give the peppers the heat they need.
We'll have a lot of peppers this year. We'll add compost to it next year.
We'll have a lot of peppers this year. We'll add compost to it next year.
Stuff growing just about everywhere.
This is the only part of the squash and gourd row that is behaving so far.
Pumpkins all over the place.
Autumn Sunflowers. Behind these are some of the scrub Apricot plums still hanging around.
Though I am mostly employed building the new Farmhouse, I have been improving how I make soil for planting and have spent quite a few days working toward turning the sterile or weedy clays into something that will grow plants.
About a month ago I spent a day building a new compost pile from the piles of stuff I had around the Farm. This new effort is something with some real size to it. The "wind ridge" pile in the picture to the right will eventually become the planting spaces for our new Strawberry patch next Spring. The current pile is perhaps eight times the size of my largest earlier pile and the soils it is creating appear to be great quality. I will need to duplicate this pile eight more times to finish building the planting spaces of the Farm, but the effort will be rewarded for many years to come.
Before I started learning to make dirt the problem with our soils was drainage. The heavy clay simply didn't drain water away and the roots rotted out. Then when the heat came the clays dried into hard pan which was horrible to dig through. My later attempts at soil making was are doing pretty well, but the soil didn't hold enough water and we have to add water frequently. With any luck the new dirt will do the job.
To keep this posting a manageable read I'll let it go here. The only thing I had left to write about is that we have another litter of puppies on the way. Bit O'Honey and ClarkeBar got together about ten days ago so we expect a litter in September. But there's still plenty to do between then and now. Dogs were always the first business we needed to succeed in for this project to work. And so far the plan seems to be working.
About a month ago I spent a day building a new compost pile from the piles of stuff I had around the Farm. This new effort is something with some real size to it. The "wind ridge" pile in the picture to the right will eventually become the planting spaces for our new Strawberry patch next Spring. The current pile is perhaps eight times the size of my largest earlier pile and the soils it is creating appear to be great quality. I will need to duplicate this pile eight more times to finish building the planting spaces of the Farm, but the effort will be rewarded for many years to come.
Before I started learning to make dirt the problem with our soils was drainage. The heavy clay simply didn't drain water away and the roots rotted out. Then when the heat came the clays dried into hard pan which was horrible to dig through. My later attempts at soil making was are doing pretty well, but the soil didn't hold enough water and we have to add water frequently. With any luck the new dirt will do the job.
To keep this posting a manageable read I'll let it go here. The only thing I had left to write about is that we have another litter of puppies on the way. Bit O'Honey and ClarkeBar got together about ten days ago so we expect a litter in September. But there's still plenty to do between then and now. Dogs were always the first business we needed to succeed in for this project to work. And so far the plan seems to be working.
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