I've been a little lazy making updates here recently between the holidays and quite frankly the stress and depression catching up with me after. I haven't seen my husband, Tony, since Christmas and I'm going a three week stretch before I'll see him again. Aside from cleaning, decluttering and a few knit and crochet projects, I don't have any activities to keep me distracted and I've kinda let things go the past couple of weeks.
This week I've been reading a book Organizing from the Inside Out by Julie Morgenstern to help motivate me in my decluttering efforts and help with the daunting task of organizing the new house.
Over New Year's weekend, Tony started framing the roof of the house. Money is tight this pay period, so I stayed in Texas so he could have more money for lumber. I don't have any photos of the roof yet, but I do have photos from when I helped lay the OSB (Oriented Strand Board) for the subfloor and when we started framing the walls.
The weekend of December 11 & 12, temperatures did not get above freezing in our part of Oklahoma and we were laying the OSB for the final layer of the subfloor.
We used a general floor adhesive to help bond the insulated panels with the OSB. Then we screwed the OSB to the panels.
We needed to paint the OSB to help protect it from the elements, but since it didn't get above freezing we had a problem with the paint and adhesive both freezing. Here's the paint can with frozen paint. As soon as I poured it from the can it would freeze on the can and on the roller. One can of paint didn't cover very much.
Here's our lasagna floor. The boxes for the floor joists, the insulated panels and the OSB.
The subfloor completed. We had a neighbor's son come later in the week and finish painting for us when the weather was warmer.
I'm having some problems with the formatting, so in the above picture we used 2"x10" boards to help block in the subfloor and support the base of the walls. This is what we started doing the weekend of December 18 & 19.
Below the guys (Tony, his friend Quinton and Quinton's sons Nick and Bubba) are laying out the first wall.
First wall is up. This is a wall for the bathroom and closet.
Second wall is up. This is for the closet and bedroom.
Second portion of first wall is up. This is for the kitchen and utility room.
View from the top of the hill after the first day of working on the walls.
The second day we began laying out the wall for the bedroom and living room.
Living room wall. Tony's step-dad and mom did some renovations to their home a few years ago and kept two 6' windows they gave to us. I think I'm most excited about these windows.
Bedroom wall. A desk will go under each window and the hole in between is for a through the wall window a/c unit.
Wall in its entirety.
First interior wall. This is between the closet and bathroom. You also get to see Tony's unique fashion sense. His favorite fluorescent orange t-shirt and a mustard yellow button-up.
Wall with doors for the bathroom and closet. The closet is on the far end.
My closet. We ended up using a patio paint to seal the OSB. That is the floor we will be living on when we first move in until we can get the main floor laid. At the moment we are considering a slate tile for the bathroom and utility room and wood for the remainder. We're considering bamboo but haven't settled on our final choice yet.
Interior wall framing in the bathroom and bedroom. This is the final interior wall. The open area will be the kitchen and living room.
The bedroom.
The full moon as we were leaving Sunday night. This was the night before the lunar eclipse and winter solstice.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Sub-Floor: Insulated Panels
This weekend I drove up to Oklahoma very early Friday so I could go pick up some scrap insulated panels that we got for cheap ($1 each) to use as the first layer of the sub-floor. The panels are ugly but will still be every bit as effective as nice, new panels. Technically they are called Structural Insulated Panels (SIPs) and locally they are referred to as Davis Panels seeing as they come from Davis Buildings. We were able to insulate the entire sub-floor for less than $130 and had panels left over that we can use for dog houses.
These panels are a mixture of embossed and smooth fiberglass sheets with foam insulation sandwiched between.
The panels were different lengths and widths, so we pieced them together like a tetris.
We've been using screws in all of the building instead of nails and in this case used washers so we didn't punch down through the fiberglass.
In places where the panels didn't hit a support beam we laid a piece across that we could screw them down into.
There were some areas with gaps where the panels weren't cut straight originally, so we used Great Stuff to fill in those areas. We'll cut the excess off next time before we lay the plywood.
The completed layer of insulated panel sub-floor.
A picture for Erin. I thought this one looked like a face with eyes, nose and a mouth.
Back home in Texas, I'm having a problem with Sisko getting out of the fence (I suspect he's jumping it), so I took him with me this trip and he was very well behaved. I think I'll start taking him with me each weekend. Tony was happy to see his puppy.
Sisko tested the panels for us and had a gift for finding the ones not screwed down. Sunday he was afraid of jumping up on the panels for fear of falling through the floor again. So we coaxed him up when all the panels were screwed on and left. He was so upset.
Here's what our little campsite looks like. I'm really enjoying camping each week and we're getting a lot more work done since we can wake up and get right to work. We have a queen size air mattress that fits perfectly in the back of the Suburban.
The inverter we use to run the power tools and coffee maker.
Coffee maker that we also use for instant oatmeal in the mornings.
A friend loaned us her cook stove that ran out of fuel after one can of soup, so Tony used his blow torch to cook his two cans.
And finally, the fog that lingered over the area all weekend. It was cool and drizzled so the soup for lunch was perfect.
These panels are a mixture of embossed and smooth fiberglass sheets with foam insulation sandwiched between.
The panels were different lengths and widths, so we pieced them together like a tetris.
We've been using screws in all of the building instead of nails and in this case used washers so we didn't punch down through the fiberglass.
In places where the panels didn't hit a support beam we laid a piece across that we could screw them down into.
There were some areas with gaps where the panels weren't cut straight originally, so we used Great Stuff to fill in those areas. We'll cut the excess off next time before we lay the plywood.
The completed layer of insulated panel sub-floor.
A picture for Erin. I thought this one looked like a face with eyes, nose and a mouth.
Back home in Texas, I'm having a problem with Sisko getting out of the fence (I suspect he's jumping it), so I took him with me this trip and he was very well behaved. I think I'll start taking him with me each weekend. Tony was happy to see his puppy.
Sisko tested the panels for us and had a gift for finding the ones not screwed down. Sunday he was afraid of jumping up on the panels for fear of falling through the floor again. So we coaxed him up when all the panels were screwed on and left. He was so upset.
Here's what our little campsite looks like. I'm really enjoying camping each week and we're getting a lot more work done since we can wake up and get right to work. We have a queen size air mattress that fits perfectly in the back of the Suburban.
The inverter we use to run the power tools and coffee maker.
Coffee maker that we also use for instant oatmeal in the mornings.
A friend loaned us her cook stove that ran out of fuel after one can of soup, so Tony used his blow torch to cook his two cans.
And finally, the fog that lingered over the area all weekend. It was cool and drizzled so the soup for lunch was perfect.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Floor Joists
I've been neglecting updating blog posts recently simply because I have been so busy and I am so exhausted. During the week I am still painting a 48' flat bed trailer for our Peterbilt that we want to sell, I've been trying to keep up with all the animals and housework, and I've been going twice a week to Fort Worth to help a friend who is battling cancer by taking her to appointments, running errands, getting or making dinner, etc. Then on Friday I am heading up to Oklahoma while Tony and I build on Saturday and Sunday then I head home Sunday evening.
These photos are from the weekend of November 13th & 14th.
First is a photo of the support system for the floor joists that Tony completed the weekend of November 6th & 7th while I stayed home in Texas.
Here's the box Tony built to support the boards and floor joists on the area where the posts ended up being too short because the ground drops significantly in that area.
A view of the boxes that are the floor joists. We built 8'x8' boxes with 2"x10" beams every 16 inches. All this to help support to load across the beams and help make the floor sturdy enough that we can lay a tile floor later.
A shot from underneath.
The completed floor joists.
A make-shift retaining wall I've started working on to help with washout that has started to build up around the posts.
The weather was beautiful that weekend and we had some critters show up.
A lizard (dead center in the photo).
Some beautiful moths and butterflies, this is the only one I could catch though.
And there are a ton of Daddy Longlegs. This particular type is an arachnid but is not a spider since it only has two main body sections (abdomen and cephalothorax) instead of three. There are other Daddy Longlegs who are spiders though.
And finally some views of fall. I missed the main weekends where the trees were changing, but I did catch the tail end. The strange lights on the image are noise from my camera. I'm shooting with a film camera instead of a digital. Once the house/cabin is complete then I will be getting a digital SLR camera.
These photos are from the weekend of November 13th & 14th.
First is a photo of the support system for the floor joists that Tony completed the weekend of November 6th & 7th while I stayed home in Texas.
Here's the box Tony built to support the boards and floor joists on the area where the posts ended up being too short because the ground drops significantly in that area.
A view of the boxes that are the floor joists. We built 8'x8' boxes with 2"x10" beams every 16 inches. All this to help support to load across the beams and help make the floor sturdy enough that we can lay a tile floor later.
A shot from underneath.
The completed floor joists.
A make-shift retaining wall I've started working on to help with washout that has started to build up around the posts.
The weather was beautiful that weekend and we had some critters show up.
A lizard (dead center in the photo).
Some beautiful moths and butterflies, this is the only one I could catch though.
And there are a ton of Daddy Longlegs. This particular type is an arachnid but is not a spider since it only has two main body sections (abdomen and cephalothorax) instead of three. There are other Daddy Longlegs who are spiders though.
And finally some views of fall. I missed the main weekends where the trees were changing, but I did catch the tail end. The strange lights on the image are noise from my camera. I'm shooting with a film camera instead of a digital. Once the house/cabin is complete then I will be getting a digital SLR camera.
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