Tres Colinas on the road less graveled
In my 12/1/2013 post, I outlined my plans for our chicken coop along with my intention to build a swing/play set. I also shared that our house construction was finally underway. The weather was uncooperative for about a week but that left plenty of time for lots of accomplishments.
Chicken Coop Update
I managed to get most of the coop built and one coat of paint on it before we had a week of rain and very cold weather. I finished it around the middle of December. I used finished broadly as I still have to install my feeding and watering systems. As, we won't be getting any chicks until around mid-March, I will wait and use the cooler weather for other outdoor projects (fencing and fruit tree planting being top priorities). Here are pictures of the coop construction:
The framing is in place and the metal roof is on. You can see the hardwire mesh floor and venting just under the roof eaves. |
The siding is on and the nesting boxes are built. |
Painted and basically finished. |
This shows how the nesting boxes are accessed from outside the coop. You can see the "human" door on the left. The "chicken" door is on the opposite side, going to and from the chicken yard. |
Swing set Construction
This little project was a Christmas gift for Ava and Cora, so only had a week to complete it. Fortunately, it was fairly easy and the weather was good. Here's how it was done:Framing the play fort with 4x4s and 2x6s. It should handle anything the kids can throw at it. |
Decking, railing, ladder and roof support added. |
Finished product. A little tricky building it by myself (especially installing the swing legs and beam). That's why tractors have front end loaders. |
House Construction
After signing a contract in August and seeing no activity until mid-November when the foundation was framed (picture in last blog), we were a little discouraged about the lack of progress on the house construction. We realized a good deal of that time was spent on finalizing plans and other paperwork but still thought a lot of good weather days were passing without any construction. Then December arrived and so did the builders. Here are pictures showing the major phases of construction to date:
The plumbing is roughed in. |
Digging out for the beams. |
Cables in place and ready for concrete pour. These blue cables will be stretched to increase the concrete's strength. |
Starting the concrete pour. We used about 90 yards of concrete. |
Concrete pour half finished. |
Pour finished, finishing work underway. |
Slab finished and curing. Note the cables (not the toe plate bolts sticking up) sticking out near and horizontal to the ground. |
Finished slab curing for about ten days. |
Applying 33,000 psi of pressure to each cable to stretch it tight. Each cable was stretched five inches. |
Walls going up as the framing begins. |
All walls up along with some OSB siding. Starting on the ceiling and roof. |
OSB siding on and major progress on the roof. |
Framing essentially complete with moisture barrier in place. Adding soffits and siding at the eaves. |
At this point, the house is considered forty-percent complete. It's amazing to me that this required a total of eight days of work. Allow me a moment to editorialize about that work. So far almost everyone that has worked on our house has been of the Hispanic race and most likely Mexican heritage. Many have limited English speaking abilities. It is fascinating to me that so many Hollywood types complain about racism and stereotypes when almost all of my stereotypical opinions are due to what I've seen on TV and in movies. Everyone knows that Mexicans are slow and lazy...always taking siestas (again from Hollywood productions). I've been blown away by the work ethic of every one so far. They arrive about fifteen minutes before sunrise and get prepared to work. As soon as there is enough daylight to see, they go to work. The first break they take is for lunch (many worked while they ate-especially the concrete workers) and that lasts about thirty minutes. They work non-stop until it is too dark to see and then return the next day to repeat the process. Everyone was busy all of the time, NEVER standing around talking or wasting time. They have been professional, polite and respectful. While this is the work ethic that made America great, I suspect it's hard to find among most citizens now. That's all I will say on that other than I am very impressed with the workers I've seen to date.
The next steps should be the installation of the windows, doors and the roofing. Once that is done, I just might start sleeping in it.
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