
Leaps & Bounds
We had to leave town for a few days. Here are a lot of updates in a gallery. Framing at a fast and furious pace.

Basement Inside and Starting the Main
Northeast corner of the basement. Mechanical room at the back, storage room and bathroom all framed in. Roanne’s studio. Framed it with notched 2×4’s to keep the room as wide as possible. I got to notch these out on the table saw and chop saw. On my way to becoming a craftsman. It was nice […]

Fill Me Up
Time to fill the hole. Had to go with a quote from the movie “Election” but won’t elaborate any more on the meaning of the phrase since it’s not family friendly. This building is an old (obviously) blacksmith shop on Flying Horse Farm that is across from the Gellatly nut farm. It looks like it […]

Buildus Interruptus
Well, it got cold. Real cold. Like -11 below. Real hard to work productively in that temp. You make mistakes when it’s cold and windy as well. Like using an angle grinder to saw off bolts with one hand while holding the home wrap madly flapping against the house. And having it get away on […]

Joists To The World…
Tired of the terrible puns yet? Couldn’t come up with anything better for Joist Day. Joist relocation program. You wouldn’t be able to tell by this image that we had just been through 3 hours of hell. I woke up an hour early at 5:30, and all I could hear was wind. Not a good […]

Beam me up Scotty.
Pre-beam. That big open space apparently can’t support a floor without some major structural support. Who’dve thought? Good thing I’m not an architect. Check out this bad boy. Amazingly, it took only 4 of us to drag this beam (from the furthest spot in the woodpile of course) and get it up into the metal […]

Mr. Gorbachev, Build This Wall
Fully Dampenated. Let the Undampening begin. Look, walls & windows. So now the framing starts. This is where things really show progress daily.
Farmhouse Modern
We thought we were being all original like going with a farmhouse modern style. But they just keep popping up these days. Houzz Tour: Unplugging From High Tech in a Texas Farmhouse