Sunday, September 14, 2008

What's up next?

Date now firm: We're planning another work bee on Saturday, Oct. 18. That will be our first soccer-free weekend.

Our next step will be to get going on the inside of the house. Bob spent some time this afternoon trying to fill up our rented dumpster as much as possible while it's still here. Of course we have lots of work for the professionals to do, but we'll keep busy with some tasks we can do, as well. Next we will:

  • Tear out the upstairs bathroom. Tear out the wood cabinets. Shut off the water and dispose of the sink, toilet and bathtub. I think it's also safe to demolish the wall between the first bedroom at the top of the stairs and the bathtub, but we'll wait for a contractor to confirm that.
  • Tear out the downstairs bathroom. Shut off the water and electricity and tear out the walls. Dispose of tub, toilet and sink.
  • Tear out the mudroom sink. Water off, of course.
  • Finish cleaning out the basement.
  • Check condition of the floor in the upstairs bedrooms. New flooring will probably wait until after we move in, so for now we want to determine whether it's best to keep the coverings that are already there or expose the wood planks. This will be in the SE, S center, SW and NW rooms.
  • Remove the kitchen counter. If we can do it easily without destroying cabinets or wall, remove the laminate countertop and sink (water off).
  • Tear out the living room carpet.
  • Scrape flooring off mudroom and laundry room concrete.

Outside, lower priorities:

  • Put up the bathouses. The big one goes on the big barn. The smaller one goes on the electric pole closer to the house. They should be at least 15 feet up and tools are in the shop.
  • Cut smaller trees and brush. Bob did the east side of the house; next is the west and around the apple tree.
  • Clean out the hog barn and big barn. Junk, burn or scrap anything no one needs.
  • Cut down the cedar trees behind the house.

We'll probably have lots of lathe and plaster to tear out inside the house, but for now we're going to wait until we know for sure it's our final decision.

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Work bee statistics

So much was accomplished the last few days! We offer a gigantic thank you to Al, Brenda, Diane, Dick, Doris, Maggie and Mark for your roles in making the work bee so successful.

— Bob & Sue

Here is the tally:

  • 150 person hours worked (plus babysitting, fixing meals, planning, etc.)
  • 3 buildings removed and burned
  • 2.5 acres of weeds mowed
  • 3 lawnmower tires punctured by nails and wire
  • 3 lawnmower blades busted on iron and rocks
  • 20 hours put on Dad's loader tractor
  • 40 fence posts pulled
  • 400 feet of barbed wire removed
  • 5.5 tons of scrap metal sold (most hauled in Dick's truck)
  • 1 borrowed trailer gouged up on the deck by the not-so-careful scrapyard dude (Sorry, Leon!)
  • 10-yard dumpster about 2/3 filled
  • 1 load of wood readied in the wagon for burning under the syrup pan this spring
  • Several small trees felled and burned
  • Scads of grapevine pruned away
  • Immeasurable improvement made in the appearance and safety of the farmstead

Monday, September 8, 2008

Just a short to-do list

Yikes! The short list of priorities for tomorrow quickly grew into a long task list. We'll see what a crew of willing workers can handle in one day.

Priorities for today, 8/9/08
  1. Burn garage roof (if possible!)
  2. Remove fenceposts behind big barn
  3. Mow as much as possible
  4. Remove freezer from house and scrap it
  5. After 12 p.m.: Take big scrap machinery on trailer
  6. Finish taking small scrap
  7. Look for more tires and put in truck
  8. Clear out milkhouse (keep the blue globes — they’re for the lightning rods)
  9. Haul any large items out of big barn
  10. Haul any large items out of hog barn
  11. Clear out attic
  12. Burn cabinet from basement
  13. Take hazardous materials from basement to pile by shop
  14. Clean misc. stuff out of basement
  15. Put up bat houses (reach with loader bucket)
  16. Load wood into wagon for syrup
  17. Move rocks/concrete chunks into a pile
  18. Put out fire and scrap or bury anything remaining (or could put into dumpster)
  19. Trim trees/grapevine on east side of house
  20. Pull down eavestroughs and scrap

3 tons and counting

The most easily quantifiable accomplishment of today was that Dick took 3 tons (tons!) of scrap metal to be recycled. We spent all day working on general cleanup at the farmstead.

Dick became the king of scrap metal, sorting it by type, loading it and taking trips to deliver it in his truck. None of us predicted there would be that much. And that's only pieces small enough to load by hand — from nuts and bolts to box springs and cow stanchions. Bob and I stopped counting after a dozen broken pitchforks alone. Tomorrow we'll load entire old iron implements on a trailer with the loader tractor.

Maggie worked all day in the shop. She sorted through the treasures (an ox yoke, a few Lincoln Logs and marbles, interesting farm tools) and the junk (random jugs of hazardous waste, evidence of some rodent's bachelor pad, parts to long-gone tractors). The progress in that one building alone was incredible.

Bob and Mark took on a variety of projects that needed to be done. Trees were trimmed (lots more to go though), wood loaded, junk burned, decisions made, weeds mowed, parts run after, a burn permit secured. I also worked on a variety of projects, starting with fence post patrol and ending with mowing weeds in the light rain. When I started to get cold, I focused on mowing closer to the fire until I was warm enough to move farther away.

Dad spent most of the day on the loader tractor. He pulled fenceposts, yanked old implements from their burial places in the ground and carried burnable items to the big fire.

The only big job we weren't able to get done today that we wanted to was to burn the roof from the old garage. It shattered apart whenever we hooked onto it with the tractor, so we'll have to try something different tomorrow. If all else fails, plan B is to remove the tin and cut up the wood by hand. Ugh, not looking forward to that.

Brenda kept the girls safe by babysitting them all day. They spent the morning playing with her old Strawberry Shortcake dolls. She's in the midst of cleaning, sorting and packing, so she was already busy.

After she was home from work in the afternoon, Diane took care of the girls and made a nice dinner for the crew, putting up with the mess we must have tramped in the house — and more to come tomorrow.

We got home about 8 p.m. and the girls and I had our showers. Addy and I managed to much of today's school done in a short period of time. I'm determined to stay on track even with all the work to be done.

Before I hit the hay, I'm going to make out our list of priorities to accomplish tomorrow. We want to make use of the loader tractor, mower, trailer and dumpster while we have them. Mom will be staying with the girls at Mark and Diane's house, so I figure she can use her substitute teacher experience and work with Addy on some of her schoolwork tomorrow.

Sunday, September 7, 2008

More outside cleanup

We finished up another day of cleaning up the farmstead. We made piles of scrap metal to recycle and wood to burn. We filled the dumpster up more than we expected.

When we got to the house in the early afternoon, after church and lunch, we were surprised to find Dad already there with the lawnmower. The fuel line came loose though, so we'll have to try to find a part to reconnect it to the tank through a Scag dealer tomorrow. We're concerned about ruining the entire mower at our place. He's gone through two tires, three blades and a bunch of barbed wire wrapped around underneath so far.

Bob finished removing planks from the old garage. Diane wants an outhouse for syrup season in the woods — and I agree that it's harder for us women to find a spot to go — so a friend will build one out of the garage wood. After Bob had all the planks off, we pushed the garage over by hand without too much effort. I can breathe a little easier now knowing it won't fall on the kids.

Maggie and Dick came by in the evening and were amazed to find a seemingly endless burial ground of metal scraps next to the shop. They worked at it for quite awhile and will be back tomorrow for more help. Bob went down to the house to retrieve some sloppy joes for us that Diane had made. They hit the spot.

Brenda will watch the girls tomorrow. Mark will join us for the work bee and Dad will be back with the loader tractor this time.

After everyone else was gone, our last job for the night was to pull some cardboard boxes out of the milkhouse and burn them. While we watched the fire I noticed a beautiful half moon. Later we heard an unusual bird call that turned out to be the twittering a male barn owl makes to attract a mate. It sounded like this.

Friday, September 5, 2008

Tears of ____?_____

Dad came with his big Skag Turf Tiger zero-turn lawnmower today and chopped down two acres of weeds growing up around the property and the barnyard. That thing is a beast, nearly as effective as a brush hog. I followed him around, looking for any old equipment, rocks or other debris that might get in the way.

We knew there was a lot of junk buried under the weeds and brush. He found some only a couple hours into the project — or I should say, it found him. Neither of us saw it. A nail or something left not one, not two, but three holes in the tire tube. A quick trip to B.A. to get it fixed turned into a three-hour hiatus from the mowing job. The repair guy had his thumb in one of the holes when he showed it to us.

Once Dad got back to work in the afternoon, I pulled out more cement blocks, tires and random rusty metal, then headed up front to the dumpster. As soon as I turned around and saw how much he had accomplished, I felt like crying.

The thing is, I'm not sure why. I'm not sure if it was more, "Wow, I can really see progress now! This is where our children will run and play! This is where we will make memories!" or "What the #$%# have we gotten ourselves into?"

It was a little of both.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

To tear out or not to tear out?

The more we get into this project, the more it looks like we'll have to tear things down before we build them up. We started with a short priority list. It grows by the day.

The main question is whether to tear out the plaster in order to make access easier and less costly for insulation, plumbing, electric and heating. I think we know the answer. We just don't want to admit it.

It would be a much easier decision if our house in RC was sold. But it's not.